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The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do...
published: 31 Oct 2019
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Rockefeller Institute Webinar: Reimagining Healthcare Systems after COVID-19
This webinar examines the healthcare system's response to COVID-19 and how we might reimagine healthcare moving forward. Topics covered include:
- 21st Century Trends in Healthcare: Pre-COVID-19. How have market forces and state and federal healthcare policy over the 21st century reshaped the healthcare system to its current form?
- Assessing the Healthcare System’s Response to COVID-19. How have these changes impacted the ability of the healthcare system to respond to the COVID-19 public health crisis?
- Reimagining the Healthcare System Post-COVID-19. What will the healthcare system look like post-COVID-19? What are the policy priorities moving forward?
0:00 Introduction by Laura Schultz, executive director of research at the Rockefeller Institute
0:58 Remarks by Moderator Jeff Ritter,...
published: 26 Jun 2020
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The origins of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute (1945-1965)
Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene. Seminário do CTC realizado no anfiteatro do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto - SP no dia 14 de outubro de 2016.
published: 20 Oct 2016
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Big Pharma History - How John D Rockefeller Created Western Medicine
John D Rockefeller was an oil billionaire that destroyed medicine. Learn how he created Western medicine and ruined health.
Learn more about Rockefeller
https://bit.ly/3BQIhkx
Rockefeller Medicine
We have an evil and corrupt medical system. The one you can thank is John D Rockefeller. He was an oil billionaire that became the richest man in the United States
In 1863 he opened his first oil refinery in Cleveland. Rockefeller believed that competition was sin, and that he needed to eliminate the competition. Therefore he started to buy every oil refinery that he could find in Cleveland, and within two years he owned most of them. Over a decade later, his company Standard Oil owned most oil refineries in the United States.
His control over the oil market created the first American mono...
published: 05 Nov 2021
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Christian de Duve - Freedom in Research: Learning from the Rockefeller Institute (73/106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller has been the model for this institute and the principles are multidisciplinary collaboration and priority to excellence. Now that's a very important point about Rockefeller in comparison to other universities. At Rockefeller there are no departments; there are labora...
published: 11 Jul 2017
-
Part 2 - The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do...
published: 31 Oct 2019
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The West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute
A brief introduction of WVU’s new Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute with interviews of Gordon Gee, Ali Rezai, Albert Wright, and Clay Marsh.
published: 16 Apr 2018
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An overview of the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
Our mission is to perpetuate the legacy of a remarkable man. Winthrop Rockefeller forever changed his adopted state of Arkansas by employing "the Rockefeller ethic," a unique approach to problem solving. We employ that same ethic today as we convene key leaders, thinkers and scholars to address key issues facing Arkansas, the South and our country as a whole.
published: 04 Sep 2018
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Rockefeller Institute Webinar: Public Sector Management Following COVID-19
published: 10 Sep 2020
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Christian de Duve - The Rockefeller Institute and Albert Claude (29/106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2005]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research was, of course, a sort of legendary institution: the most famous research institute in the field of biology and medicine in the world; even at that time it had already something like a dozen Nobel Prize winners on its staff, or having b...
published: 11 Jul 2017
52:18
The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia...
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, membro titular da Academia Brasileira de Ciências e recebeu a Ordem do Mérito Científico Brasileiro.
https://wn.com/The_Origin_Of_Cell_Biology_At_The_Rockefeller_Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, membro titular da Academia Brasileira de Ciências e recebeu a Ordem do Mérito Científico Brasileiro.
- published: 31 Oct 2019
- views: 253
1:12:07
Rockefeller Institute Webinar: Reimagining Healthcare Systems after COVID-19
This webinar examines the healthcare system's response to COVID-19 and how we might reimagine healthcare moving forward. Topics covered include:
- 21st Century...
This webinar examines the healthcare system's response to COVID-19 and how we might reimagine healthcare moving forward. Topics covered include:
- 21st Century Trends in Healthcare: Pre-COVID-19. How have market forces and state and federal healthcare policy over the 21st century reshaped the healthcare system to its current form?
- Assessing the Healthcare System’s Response to COVID-19. How have these changes impacted the ability of the healthcare system to respond to the COVID-19 public health crisis?
- Reimagining the Healthcare System Post-COVID-19. What will the healthcare system look like post-COVID-19? What are the policy priorities moving forward?
0:00 Introduction by Laura Schultz, executive director of research at the Rockefeller Institute
0:58 Remarks by Moderator Jeff Ritter, assistant professor at SUNY Empire State College
5:00 Presentation by Barry Eisenberg, associate professor at SUNY Empire State College
23:47 Presentation by Michael Gusmano, fellow at the Rockefeller Institute
35:21 Presentation by Courtney Burke, chief operating and innovation officer at HANYS
54:49 Q & A
Speaker bios can be found here: https://conta.cc/37ADxBU
https://wn.com/Rockefeller_Institute_Webinar_Reimagining_Healthcare_Systems_After_Covid_19
This webinar examines the healthcare system's response to COVID-19 and how we might reimagine healthcare moving forward. Topics covered include:
- 21st Century Trends in Healthcare: Pre-COVID-19. How have market forces and state and federal healthcare policy over the 21st century reshaped the healthcare system to its current form?
- Assessing the Healthcare System’s Response to COVID-19. How have these changes impacted the ability of the healthcare system to respond to the COVID-19 public health crisis?
- Reimagining the Healthcare System Post-COVID-19. What will the healthcare system look like post-COVID-19? What are the policy priorities moving forward?
0:00 Introduction by Laura Schultz, executive director of research at the Rockefeller Institute
0:58 Remarks by Moderator Jeff Ritter, assistant professor at SUNY Empire State College
5:00 Presentation by Barry Eisenberg, associate professor at SUNY Empire State College
23:47 Presentation by Michael Gusmano, fellow at the Rockefeller Institute
35:21 Presentation by Courtney Burke, chief operating and innovation officer at HANYS
54:49 Q & A
Speaker bios can be found here: https://conta.cc/37ADxBU
- published: 26 Jun 2020
- views: 343
1:08:14
The origins of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute (1945-1965)
Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene. Seminário do CTC realizado no anfiteatro do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto - SP no dia 14 de outubro de 2016.
Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene. Seminário do CTC realizado no anfiteatro do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto - SP no dia 14 de outubro de 2016.
https://wn.com/The_Origins_Of_Cell_Biology_At_The_Rockefeller_Institute_(1945_1965)
Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene. Seminário do CTC realizado no anfiteatro do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto - SP no dia 14 de outubro de 2016.
- published: 20 Oct 2016
- views: 159
5:58
Big Pharma History - How John D Rockefeller Created Western Medicine
John D Rockefeller was an oil billionaire that destroyed medicine. Learn how he created Western medicine and ruined health.
Learn more about Rockefeller
https:...
John D Rockefeller was an oil billionaire that destroyed medicine. Learn how he created Western medicine and ruined health.
Learn more about Rockefeller
https://bit.ly/3BQIhkx
Rockefeller Medicine
We have an evil and corrupt medical system. The one you can thank is John D Rockefeller. He was an oil billionaire that became the richest man in the United States
In 1863 he opened his first oil refinery in Cleveland. Rockefeller believed that competition was sin, and that he needed to eliminate the competition. Therefore he started to buy every oil refinery that he could find in Cleveland, and within two years he owned most of them. Over a decade later, his company Standard Oil owned most oil refineries in the United States.
His control over the oil market created the first American monopoly. The government didn't like this, so they forced his company to split into smaller companies.
Because of Rockefeller's greed, not many people liked him. He wanted to fix his reputation, but at the same time, earn even more money. Then he found a brilliant solution.
Rockefeller found out that there was a way to use his oil to create drugs. His oil was only worth about a nickel per gallon, but if he used his oil to create drugs, he could earn millions of dollars per gallon.
In order for him to succeed with his plan, he bought a German company I.G Farben. It was the same company that would later assist Hitler when he killed Jews. Rockefeller's biggest threat was natural health. One big problem with natural remedies was that it wasn't possible to patent them. Therefore he needed to eliminate it.
The first step in the takeover of the medical system was to take over the medical schools. Rockefeller then employed a man called Abraham Flexner. His task was to make a report of the medical schools in America.
Flexner was against natural health and believed that it was quackery, and that hospitals needed to use allopathic scientific medicine. Flexner released his report in 1910.In his report, he said that American schools should impose higher admission and graduation standards.
Congress then accepted his report and medical schools had to teach allopathic medicine. When Rockefeller got the green light that medical schools had to teach allopathic medicine he and the Carnegie family gave grants to medical schools.
Rockefeller also created the American Medical Association. This organization introduced a medical licensing system. Only doctors that had a license could work as a doctor, and everyone else that used natural remedies got eliminated.
The Rockefellers are one of the biggest names in the eugenics movement. It's the belief that the world is overpopulated and that we need to shrink it. Rockefeller and other elite banking families believed that they were better than anybody else and that they needed to create a pure race.
The eugenics movement started in America before Hitler killed Jews. It was actually the Rockefellers that introduced this concept to him and helped him kill a lot of people. The Rockefellers also started the organization Planned Parenthood. Bill Gates' father was once the leader of this organization, and that's the reason why Bill Gates is so involved in eugenics.
Federal Reserve Board Meeting
The Rockefellers and the other elite banking families also created the Federal Reserve. It's a central bank in America that creates money from thin air.Bankers met in secrecy in Jekyll Island, Georgia, in 1910. Their plan was to take over the financial system.
In 1913, they got Congress to pass a bill, where the money would be created from a central bank. And with the control over the production of money, the Rockefellers, and other elite families could now buy everything they wanted.
The aim of Big Pharma medicine is not to make people healthy. Instead, its goal is to make everyone sick, because you can't earn a lot of money if people are healthy.
You can't become healthy if you follow the corrupt system. Psychopaths created the medical system that we have today, and they still run it. Unless we don't realize this, we will continue to stay sick and never heal.
Donation:
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18jNdBFXcQoLUPkYDQJ4MAxwMuDLbSoVNi
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87RRQYwbnqAKzTpLKDn94fTcuNsAWXfxMCuq36ieG2jm9ALm1xB8eWd6zZKYLBBSL35XYkcuXcM9y4PcwyF7e32DDqjVbGN
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https://wn.com/Big_Pharma_History_How_John_D_Rockefeller_Created_Western_Medicine
John D Rockefeller was an oil billionaire that destroyed medicine. Learn how he created Western medicine and ruined health.
Learn more about Rockefeller
https://bit.ly/3BQIhkx
Rockefeller Medicine
We have an evil and corrupt medical system. The one you can thank is John D Rockefeller. He was an oil billionaire that became the richest man in the United States
In 1863 he opened his first oil refinery in Cleveland. Rockefeller believed that competition was sin, and that he needed to eliminate the competition. Therefore he started to buy every oil refinery that he could find in Cleveland, and within two years he owned most of them. Over a decade later, his company Standard Oil owned most oil refineries in the United States.
His control over the oil market created the first American monopoly. The government didn't like this, so they forced his company to split into smaller companies.
Because of Rockefeller's greed, not many people liked him. He wanted to fix his reputation, but at the same time, earn even more money. Then he found a brilliant solution.
Rockefeller found out that there was a way to use his oil to create drugs. His oil was only worth about a nickel per gallon, but if he used his oil to create drugs, he could earn millions of dollars per gallon.
In order for him to succeed with his plan, he bought a German company I.G Farben. It was the same company that would later assist Hitler when he killed Jews. Rockefeller's biggest threat was natural health. One big problem with natural remedies was that it wasn't possible to patent them. Therefore he needed to eliminate it.
The first step in the takeover of the medical system was to take over the medical schools. Rockefeller then employed a man called Abraham Flexner. His task was to make a report of the medical schools in America.
Flexner was against natural health and believed that it was quackery, and that hospitals needed to use allopathic scientific medicine. Flexner released his report in 1910.In his report, he said that American schools should impose higher admission and graduation standards.
Congress then accepted his report and medical schools had to teach allopathic medicine. When Rockefeller got the green light that medical schools had to teach allopathic medicine he and the Carnegie family gave grants to medical schools.
Rockefeller also created the American Medical Association. This organization introduced a medical licensing system. Only doctors that had a license could work as a doctor, and everyone else that used natural remedies got eliminated.
The Rockefellers are one of the biggest names in the eugenics movement. It's the belief that the world is overpopulated and that we need to shrink it. Rockefeller and other elite banking families believed that they were better than anybody else and that they needed to create a pure race.
The eugenics movement started in America before Hitler killed Jews. It was actually the Rockefellers that introduced this concept to him and helped him kill a lot of people. The Rockefellers also started the organization Planned Parenthood. Bill Gates' father was once the leader of this organization, and that's the reason why Bill Gates is so involved in eugenics.
Federal Reserve Board Meeting
The Rockefellers and the other elite banking families also created the Federal Reserve. It's a central bank in America that creates money from thin air.Bankers met in secrecy in Jekyll Island, Georgia, in 1910. Their plan was to take over the financial system.
In 1913, they got Congress to pass a bill, where the money would be created from a central bank. And with the control over the production of money, the Rockefellers, and other elite families could now buy everything they wanted.
The aim of Big Pharma medicine is not to make people healthy. Instead, its goal is to make everyone sick, because you can't earn a lot of money if people are healthy.
You can't become healthy if you follow the corrupt system. Psychopaths created the medical system that we have today, and they still run it. Unless we don't realize this, we will continue to stay sick and never heal.
Donation:
Bitcoin:
18jNdBFXcQoLUPkYDQJ4MAxwMuDLbSoVNi
Monero
87RRQYwbnqAKzTpLKDn94fTcuNsAWXfxMCuq36ieG2jm9ALm1xB8eWd6zZKYLBBSL35XYkcuXcM9y4PcwyF7e32DDqjVbGN
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/cancerwisdom
Minds:
https://www.minds.com/cancerwisdom
Gab
https://www.gab.com/cancerwisdom
Steemit
https://steemit.com/@cancerwisdom
Bastyon
https://bastyon.com/cancerwisdom
Flote
https://flote.app/cancerwisdom
Bittubbers:
https://bittube.tv/profile/cancerwisdomtv
Bitchute:
https://www.bitchute.com/cancerwisdomtv/
LBRY.com
https://open.lbry.com/@cancerwisdomtv:f
Rumble:
https://rumble.com/cancerwisdomtv
- published: 05 Nov 2021
- views: 28896
3:34
Christian de Duve - Freedom in Research: Learning from the Rockefeller Institute (73/106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemi...
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller has been the model for this institute and the principles are multidisciplinary collaboration and priority to excellence. Now that's a very important point about Rockefeller in comparison to other universities. At Rockefeller there are no departments; there are laboratories and the laboratories are directed by scientist who do what they want to do, what they are interested in, and they are appointed on the basis of excellence. And if you find an investigator, a first-class investigator, and his interest is neural biology, well, then, you have a lab of neural biology; and if you find an investigator who is interested in micro bacteria, leprosy or tuberculosis, then you happen to have a lab, but you don't fill in positions – you don't have departments that have to be filled in. Whereas in a university you have to teach everything and therefore you need an immunologist, you need a bacteriologist, you need... and that's a big difference. And we've applied the same principle here. We... we put the premium on excellence; and then, if we are lucky enough to find a really first-class investigator, we let him do what he wants and just tell him that he should, after a few years, try to find his own funding. That is, we provide... when we have a really good man, we have enough funds, a small endowment, so that we can offer a new investigator facilities and a budget to start something, but by three to five years we feel that he should be self-supporting and it works that way. I think Det Bronk, whom I mentioned as... as President of Rockefeller University when I joined and a very distinguished American scientist, put it in a... a nutshell: he said, 'As a principle,' he said, 'find the best people, and when you have them, keep out of their way.' So we don't believe in program research; we don't believe in a top administration that tells the people what to do, that creates programs and a lot of bureaucratic rules. No, it's a... it's a bottom-up kind of organisation; we get the scientists and they do what they want – under control of course. I mean, you can't just do what you want – you have to do good work and it has to fit within the general philosophy of the institute. If somebody came here and he said he wants to find the next... another extra solar planet, I would say, 'Sorry, but that doesn't work.'
https://wn.com/Christian_De_Duve_Freedom_In_Research_Learning_From_The_Rockefeller_Institute_(73_106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2008]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller has been the model for this institute and the principles are multidisciplinary collaboration and priority to excellence. Now that's a very important point about Rockefeller in comparison to other universities. At Rockefeller there are no departments; there are laboratories and the laboratories are directed by scientist who do what they want to do, what they are interested in, and they are appointed on the basis of excellence. And if you find an investigator, a first-class investigator, and his interest is neural biology, well, then, you have a lab of neural biology; and if you find an investigator who is interested in micro bacteria, leprosy or tuberculosis, then you happen to have a lab, but you don't fill in positions – you don't have departments that have to be filled in. Whereas in a university you have to teach everything and therefore you need an immunologist, you need a bacteriologist, you need... and that's a big difference. And we've applied the same principle here. We... we put the premium on excellence; and then, if we are lucky enough to find a really first-class investigator, we let him do what he wants and just tell him that he should, after a few years, try to find his own funding. That is, we provide... when we have a really good man, we have enough funds, a small endowment, so that we can offer a new investigator facilities and a budget to start something, but by three to five years we feel that he should be self-supporting and it works that way. I think Det Bronk, whom I mentioned as... as President of Rockefeller University when I joined and a very distinguished American scientist, put it in a... a nutshell: he said, 'As a principle,' he said, 'find the best people, and when you have them, keep out of their way.' So we don't believe in program research; we don't believe in a top administration that tells the people what to do, that creates programs and a lot of bureaucratic rules. No, it's a... it's a bottom-up kind of organisation; we get the scientists and they do what they want – under control of course. I mean, you can't just do what you want – you have to do good work and it has to fit within the general philosophy of the institute. If somebody came here and he said he wants to find the next... another extra solar planet, I would say, 'Sorry, but that doesn't work.'
- published: 11 Jul 2017
- views: 73
1:30:39
Part 2 - The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia...
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, membro titular da Academia Brasileira de Ciências e recebeu a Ordem do Mérito Científico Brasileiro.
https://wn.com/Part_2_The_Origin_Of_Cell_Biology_At_The_Rockefeller_Institute
O Prof. Dr. Lewis Joel Greene ministrou a palestra “The origin of cell biology at the Rockefeller Institute”, no Seminário do CTC. O evento foi realizado no dia 13 de setembro de 2019, no Anfiteatro Vermelho do Hemocentro de Ribeirão Preto.
A programação foi dividida em duas partes. A primeira etapa teve como título “Applying electron microscopy to biological material” e a segunda teve como tema “Intracellular aspects of the process of protein secretion”.
O Dr. Greene estudou na Universidade Rockefeller de 1955 a 1962, tendo completado o PhD sob a orientação de G.E. Palade e C.H.W. Hirs. De 1962 a 1974, trabalhou como Bioquímico no Laboratório Nacional de Brookhaven. Veio para a FMRP-USP em 1974, aposentou-se em 2004 e continua até a presente data como Professor Sênior. Ele é fundador do Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research, membro titular da Academia Brasileira de Ciências e recebeu a Ordem do Mérito Científico Brasileiro.
- published: 31 Oct 2019
- views: 116
3:58
The West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute
A brief introduction of WVU’s new Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute with interviews of Gordon Gee, Ali Rezai, Albert Wright, and Clay Marsh.
A brief introduction of WVU’s new Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute with interviews of Gordon Gee, Ali Rezai, Albert Wright, and Clay Marsh.
https://wn.com/The_West_Virginia_University_Rockefeller_Neuroscience_Institute
A brief introduction of WVU’s new Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute with interviews of Gordon Gee, Ali Rezai, Albert Wright, and Clay Marsh.
- published: 16 Apr 2018
- views: 4831
5:50
An overview of the Winthrop Rockefeller Institute
Our mission is to perpetuate the legacy of a remarkable man. Winthrop Rockefeller forever changed his adopted state of Arkansas by employing "the Rockefeller et...
Our mission is to perpetuate the legacy of a remarkable man. Winthrop Rockefeller forever changed his adopted state of Arkansas by employing "the Rockefeller ethic," a unique approach to problem solving. We employ that same ethic today as we convene key leaders, thinkers and scholars to address key issues facing Arkansas, the South and our country as a whole.
https://wn.com/An_Overview_Of_The_Winthrop_Rockefeller_Institute
Our mission is to perpetuate the legacy of a remarkable man. Winthrop Rockefeller forever changed his adopted state of Arkansas by employing "the Rockefeller ethic," a unique approach to problem solving. We employ that same ethic today as we convene key leaders, thinkers and scholars to address key issues facing Arkansas, the South and our country as a whole.
- published: 04 Sep 2018
- views: 1898
4:34
Christian de Duve - The Rockefeller Institute and Albert Claude (29/106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemi...
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2005]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research was, of course, a sort of legendary institution: the most famous research institute in the field of biology and medicine in the world; even at that time it had already something like a dozen Nobel Prize winners on its staff, or having been on its staff. It was... it was the site where many important discoveries were made, and I just wanted to... it was known... it was known from the literature that... Martin Arrowsmith [sic], which was a very famous book by Sinclair Lewis – was all about the Rockefeller Institute. Microbe Hunters – another famous book at that time by a man, Paul de Kruif... named Paul de Kruif... also he was actually associated with an institute... anyway, it was a dream place, and so I had to go and visit it. And I had another reason to visit the Rockefeller: namely that I had a countryman who was working there and had been working there for 20 years. This countryman was Albert Claude. And Albert Claude... I could spend two hours speaking about Albert Claude – an extraordinary colourful personality. He... he was born in a small village in the Belgian Ardennes and left school at the age of ten, to work in a factory, because of family reasons. And during the First World War he became involved in... in war... work... that is, he worked for the British Intelligence Service, actually, in occupied Belgium and had several... several medals and decorations, so when the war finished, there was a law... was enacted in Belgium mostly for young people who had to interrupt their schooling because of the war – they would be allowed to enter university without a final high school diploma. And Albert Claude took advantage of that law to enter... to apply to the University of Liège, to enter medical school at the University of Liège, and in fact he hardly had got to primary school that time. He was very worried about that because he thought the courses were given in Latin at the university. Anyway, amazingly, he got his MD degree, got a fellowship or scholarship to go and work in Germany in a lab... I forget the name of the head of that lab, but the man who had found that cancer was due to some kind of microbe, to a bacteria. And he was the director of the lab and the first thing Albert Claude did when he went there was to prove his boss wrong, so that this bacterium was just due to contamination or whatever. So he was expelled from the lab and went to work with Albert Fisher who was expert – the man who just started cell culture. And so after that Claude came back to Belgium, and he was even more naive than I am. He wrote a letter to Flexner who was the director of the Rockefeller institute and said, 'I want to work on the virus discovered by... by Rous – the sarcoma, the first virus known to cause a tumour... Peyton Rous, at Rockefeller, and I want to purify that virus, and I have decided that the best place for me to do this work is the Rockefeller Institute, so I'm applying.' Just like that.
https://wn.com/Christian_De_Duve_The_Rockefeller_Institute_And_Albert_Claude_(29_106)
To listen to more of Christian de Duve’s stories, go to the playlist:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLVV0r6CmEsFy9SoFAHvwbihZVlJ11I6NR
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve (1917-2013) was best known for his work on understanding and categorising subcellular organelles. He won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1974 for his joint discovery of lysosomes, the subcellular organelles that digest macromolecules and deal with ingested bacteria. [Listener: Peter Newmark; date recorded: 2005]
TRANSCRIPT: Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research was, of course, a sort of legendary institution: the most famous research institute in the field of biology and medicine in the world; even at that time it had already something like a dozen Nobel Prize winners on its staff, or having been on its staff. It was... it was the site where many important discoveries were made, and I just wanted to... it was known... it was known from the literature that... Martin Arrowsmith [sic], which was a very famous book by Sinclair Lewis – was all about the Rockefeller Institute. Microbe Hunters – another famous book at that time by a man, Paul de Kruif... named Paul de Kruif... also he was actually associated with an institute... anyway, it was a dream place, and so I had to go and visit it. And I had another reason to visit the Rockefeller: namely that I had a countryman who was working there and had been working there for 20 years. This countryman was Albert Claude. And Albert Claude... I could spend two hours speaking about Albert Claude – an extraordinary colourful personality. He... he was born in a small village in the Belgian Ardennes and left school at the age of ten, to work in a factory, because of family reasons. And during the First World War he became involved in... in war... work... that is, he worked for the British Intelligence Service, actually, in occupied Belgium and had several... several medals and decorations, so when the war finished, there was a law... was enacted in Belgium mostly for young people who had to interrupt their schooling because of the war – they would be allowed to enter university without a final high school diploma. And Albert Claude took advantage of that law to enter... to apply to the University of Liège, to enter medical school at the University of Liège, and in fact he hardly had got to primary school that time. He was very worried about that because he thought the courses were given in Latin at the university. Anyway, amazingly, he got his MD degree, got a fellowship or scholarship to go and work in Germany in a lab... I forget the name of the head of that lab, but the man who had found that cancer was due to some kind of microbe, to a bacteria. And he was the director of the lab and the first thing Albert Claude did when he went there was to prove his boss wrong, so that this bacterium was just due to contamination or whatever. So he was expelled from the lab and went to work with Albert Fisher who was expert – the man who just started cell culture. And so after that Claude came back to Belgium, and he was even more naive than I am. He wrote a letter to Flexner who was the director of the Rockefeller institute and said, 'I want to work on the virus discovered by... by Rous – the sarcoma, the first virus known to cause a tumour... Peyton Rous, at Rockefeller, and I want to purify that virus, and I have decided that the best place for me to do this work is the Rockefeller Institute, so I'm applying.' Just like that.
- published: 11 Jul 2017
- views: 463