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30 octobre 周末 这个周末过的真是happy啊,昨天去了art institute,去了著名的Michigan ave and State St,看了silk road展
今天本来应该是去实验室的,可是。。。唉!又去supermarket了,去了远郊的一个很大的韩国超市,蔬菜、水果很多,很便宜也很新鲜,于是。。。最让我高兴的是买了正宗的韩国泡菜啊!看到好多好吃的都几乎走不动了,呵呵。下次回国一定苦练厨艺!!!!!!虾、蟹都很好,可惜我不会做,555
晚上去北国餐厅聚餐,要知道,我在美国吃的第一顿饭就是在这里哦~~~,吃起来倍儿香。然后和师兄聊天,嗯,现在,现在应该发奋了。。。。看书去了!
27 octobre 10月26日·心情正式开始做实验了,一切都好,很好.
晚上回来真的很累了,连着几天一直都在熬夜,不知道哪儿来的那么大的动力,居然是为了学习..... 唯一想听的歌就是《亲亲》。。。。。 作曲:怪兽 作词:陈没 编曲:周恒毅
那一年顶楼加盖的阁楼 什么人忘了锁
是谁找不到 未满十八岁的我 你是一滴滴隐形的眼泪 风一吹就干了 只能这样了 是吗 同时甜蜜与心碎 是你的幽默还是温柔 是瞬间烟火还是不甘寂寞 第一次你抱紧我 轻轻的亲亲 紧紧的闭上眼睛 是你不是你 说不定 还不一定 梦一样轻的亲亲 不敢用力呼吸 不敢太贪心 太相信 我的幸运
百分之百是你 思念被时光悄悄的摇落 酸酸的咬了一口 青春的苹果 香香的催眠了我 是你脸粉红了我的耳后 烫伤了我额头 现在想起来 会痛 轻轻的亲亲 紧紧的闭上眼睛 是你不是你 说不定 还不一定 梦一样轻的亲亲 不敢用力呼吸 不敢太贪心 太相信 我的幸运 百分之百是你 很多事情都过去那么久了,就像陈年老酒一样,藏在心底最深处
11月的来临,又有很多事情要做,我都不知道自己还能否在那天记起来几年前发生的事情。
那一天以后,我变了很多,有了现在的生活,我一直在思考,如果那个路口向左转了我会怎样?
幸福与不幸就是那一刹那的决定的。
谁知道我现在心里想什么呢?
知道的一个眼神的交流就足够了,不知道的永远也解释不清。
我喜欢那种相濡以沫的感觉,但人生轨迹已经注定让我远离那种宁静的感觉了。
剩下的是喧闹、浮躁还有功力,难道这就是我当初的动力?
女人的虚荣心实在太可怕了。
唉,掩饰自己以后觉得有点麻木,太多的事情都那么无所谓了。。。
难得安静下来反省自己。
有的时候甚至很渴望在实验室过那种早八点晚八点的生活。
很安静,很专注。。。。
幸福也许只是一个区间函数,拥有过也就足够了。 24 octobre 继续报喜! 今天最开心的事儿就是special topic考了第一!啧啧,还是我用计算器算出来的.....因为我们只知道自己的成绩和一些统计数字,我聪明吧 第二件高兴的事儿就是终于routing完了!整个过程发生了许多很不愉快的事情,好在一切都过去了,还好,很幸运,选了我喜欢的Tom,但愿未来的科研也能像上他的课那么出色吧 第三件是我们这周没有530啦,啦啦啦啦~~ 第四件是我们这周没有组会啦,啦啦啦啦,估计crich又出差了吧,不知道,嘿嘿,反正不用组会啦.我现在的追求就是能轻松一分钟就决不放过60秒,格外珍惜幸福生活的说.....这追求,啧啧....想到了昨天和大博的聊天,我们一致同意:我不要文章,我不要A,我不要学位,我不要工资,我只要睡觉....可见生活之艰辛.... 最后一件,当然也是最重要的啦,我已经开始收到生日祝福啦,开心哦 但愿明天能知道532的好成绩,ps,我同学昨天还梦见我考了第二呢,可不能让她太失望哦~~ 希望明天来我家party的xdjms吃好喝好玩儿好! over,收拾我的窝去,gogogogo! 23 octobre 最近开心的事儿 考试终于到一个段落啦~! 下周生日,期待我在美国的第一个生日party,很多好友来哦~~! 正在和zengziyue筹备加州之旅 我家fish出新专辑<亲亲>. 周末找到了玩伴儿陪我出去玩儿~~! ps,我总是报忧不报喜,blog成了我发牢骚的地方...嘿嘿 感谢连日来以各种方式问候我的兄弟姐妹们 16 octobre 病是这样生的.... 连日来低落的心情加上紧张的学习生活实在让我没有什么好胃口.干脆这个周末来个大腐败,结果就狠吃了以下东西:五香花生,栗子,八宝粥,蚝油猪柳(全是我自己亲手做的)...... 后记:中午简单吃了一点素菜,然后吃了一些帮助消化的药,蒙头大睡,六点钟醒来的,发现好像好了很多哦,嘿嘿. 忘了说了,我这病桌上的核桃仁,果脯还有葡萄干还做了很多贡献呢....唉!真是祸从口入啊. 以后牢记:不能同时吃很多花生,果脯,核桃仁,栗子,还有葡萄干......嗯!我不是有意馋大家的,嘿嘿.做饭去咯~~ 13 octobre 零度心情 这几天,芝加哥的天气真是一天一个样,温度直线下降.昨天,终于降到了零摄氏度,今天还下了我来美国以后的第一场雪.我的心情也正像芝加哥的天气一样,降到了结冰的温度. 昨天因为一些我现在不想解释的小事闹了一点点不愉快,当时真的很无助很无助,心中只有一个念头:回国! 本来我以为当时出国的信念很坚定,本来我以为自己很坚强,本来我觉得自己是个能拿的起放的下的人.....那一刻,什么都没有了,只是想找一个温暖的地方躲躲,哪怕只有一秒钟.... 对于这个陌生的世界我真的感觉有点害怕,不知道怎么办,口袋里除了一串钥匙以外就是手机.对!打电话,打给我最亲近的人,打给我了解的人. 就这样,我拨通了zengziyue同学的电话,她正好在车上,聊了一些,可以听得出,她也比较郁闷,还等着我给她出主意呢....算了,目前这个不是主要矛盾,挂掉电话让她吃饭去,呵呵,俺一向怜香惜玉..... 然后就给我亲爱的猪猪打电话,虽然从她最近的表现来看,日子也过的不那么顺心,不管了,呵呵.我发现我和猪猪真是有一大堆共同语言啊,只是猪猪比较聪明,看出了目前的主要矛盾,说了很多我希望听到的话,要知道,这个世上,能看到我脆弱的一面的人并不多,就这样,在临挂电话的时候,眼泪哗的一下就出来了......连我自己都很无奈,怎么现在头向下生活以后变得这样多愁善感?平时不顺心的事情不是没有,安慰我的人也很多,为什么就是这一刻眼泪变得这么不值钱????? 两个人心有灵犀真的不用在多说什么了.猪猪告诉我一定要乖,一定要坚强,一定要好好的.....就这样,我们的通话也结束了,因为五分钟以后,她也要和教授谈.这通电话真的比我钱包里所有的信用卡都值钱啊,好朋友是什么?就是关键时刻的精神支柱,呵呵!谢谢猪猪为我带来佛罗里达温暖的阳光! 于是鼓起勇气去解决问题,一点一点的...虽然很难,做了很多我以前根本不会做的事情.要知道,在每一个群体中,我都没有充当过弱者.也许长大就是这样吧,会把你身上的锐角一点一点的磨掉. 到今天中午为止,事情终于有了进展,至少我个人认为心安理得了,呵呵.我很在乎"顺心"这个东西. 当然,还得感谢昨晚和我msn的那个家伙,那个教我把"郁闷"从心里彻底赶走的家伙.... 现在么,心情还好,呵呵.刚才了解了一些别的事情,嘿嘿,发现代沟真是一种太可怕的东西了.... 这个世界上太多比金钱更珍贵的东西了,比如感情,比如理解.还好,我很庆幸我是一个幸福的人 11 octobre 卖了 今天终于卖了,本来想写很多东西的,但是此刻心情太复杂了,难以用言语来形容.
不用担心,不是卖的不好,呵呵,就是卖的过程让我感觉心太累,不像再去像一个怨妇一样在这里抱怨什么.不能忘记的就是我在美利坚的国土上留下的第一滴眼泪.虽然我一直认为我很坚强,很独立,但这次因为某人,真的太让我伤心,失望了!记忆中,应该是第一次为这种事情流眼泪吧.
嗯,第一天就体会到Tom的tough了,只要work hard,什么都没问题.....
挺好的,就算天天work24小时,俺不也跟着一年轻帅哥吗,嘿嘿....
Tom啥都好,唯一的缺点就是not available了,唉!work吧,拿上几篇jacs, angew俺就赶快闪人,嗯嗯. 8 octobre 每逢佳节倍思亲 这几天国内的双节各位同学过的怎样啊?那我就记个小学生的日记吧,嘿嘿.(其实俺不愿更新的主要原因就是文笔太差....各位粉丝见谅 近日来,本人最大的烦恼就是选导的问题,一开始,本来以为可以顺顺利利的跟着大牛Crich,顺便去Umich混个PhD,现在看来,我高看他了,或者说自己当初的想法太单纯了.连日来一件一件的事情不得不让我给他打了最低的印象分.几个臭钱,一个破头衔就把这个所谓的大牛吸引到了WSU,从芝加哥到底特律,试问到底会有多大的改变?也许,这些事情我永远也不会明白吧,呵呵.最重要的还有学术,这大牛是文章多,怎么感觉他什么乱七八糟的东西都能拿出来凑个文章?也许我还是不懂,但所有文章都是他的一作的确让人有些心寒,呵呵,这样的老板....至于那些tough的事情我已经不care了,呵呵,来美国么,跟国内的人说就是在做scientist,其实地球人都知道,俺们奏一民工,呵呵. 我总觉得自己有着一种怀习惯,喜欢一个人/事,看着他/她什么都顺眼,什么都好,不停加分,对于那些反感的东西....呵呵,整天想着法的加负分....如果说Crich是后者,那么我心中现在的人气王绝对就是帅哥--Tom Driver了.虽然我也不想跟新来的,我也不想做organometalic,但很可能我还是会跟他.Tom是一个聪明,睿智,和蔼的native,当然,最关键的,他太帅了....每当我提到他的时候总是不得不强调这点....UCI的PhD, Caltech的postdoc决不逊色于Crich曾是诺奖学生的背景.至少在我看来是这样的.最近也在不断的寻找着各种关于Tom的信息,总觉得跟着他赌一把,胜算的机会还是相当大的,呵呵.哦,对了,Tom还有一点非常吸引我,他做事很fair,他会很直接,清楚的告诉我他目前的情况以及未来可能发生的事情,我告诉他我面临的问题,他会站在一个旁观者的角度给我分析问题,而不是一味的拉我进组,这一点是所有其他教授比不上的,呵呵,至少我知道新来的Miller和Snee还有其他几个我谈过的教授绝对做不到这一点.我眼中的Tom是一个纯粹做学术的人,也许,这就是我当初决定出国留学所要寻找的东西吧. 说了学习,再说说娱乐吧,嘿嘿.其实俺这里也没啥好娱乐的,真的.....以前的那些狐朋狗友实在是太熟了,一接起电话就知道我要说什么....然后就开始不着边儿的胡扯,最后的结论就是:咱这样的胡扯如果泄漏出去的话,谁都甭想嫁出去...为了未来伟大的事业,我们挂电话吧!嘿嘿.跟班上的同学吧,还没混熟,老外就算了吧,呵呵,我不是愤青,当然也不会崇洋媚外,不过总觉得交流起来还是不那么爽.至于中国人,嗯,正在考察...结果未知,不过总觉得他们不会成为像zengziyue同学那样的人物,因为没人知道火星最近发生了什么事情....so,嗯,说回来了,本人最大的娱乐项目就是roommate的八卦(嘘,小声点儿,俺还没领营业执照呢!).我也挺佩服自己的,就一个八卦,俺已经说了将近两个月了.....这还得归功于伟大的初恋.....发现初恋就是挺有趣啊,芝麻点儿大的事情,经我一渲染,就成冬瓜那么大了,咳咳....各位单身的同仁们,不知道你们是否赞成俺的观点:下次恋爱,找个懂事的吧! 最后就是俺这个国庆的琐事:最近家里视频好了,网络也不像以前那么慢了,我妈在家没事干一有空就和我视频,中秋那天还见了家里的亲戚们,很是开心啊.其实在这边过除了没人和我胡吃海喝外加没谱的闲扯以外其他都挺好的,也不知道这些家伙最近混怎样,没月饼吃的可以来我这里拿月饼啊,嘿嘿.老妈这几天总在网上,没事就聊聊,和在家里差不多.对了,我买的双黄白莲蓉月饼狠是好吃啊!嗯,不说了,给老妈打个电话,今天是"她老人家"48岁大寿,然后去炖鱼,喵~鱼儿我来啦~~ 5 octobre The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2006 (from stanford website)Roger Kornberg wins the 2006 Nobel Prize in ChemistryHe and his father are the sixth father and son to win Nobel Prizes
By KRISTA CONGER STANFORD, Calif. — The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences today awarded Roger Kornberg, PhD, of the Stanford University School of Medicine, the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in understanding how DNA is converted into RNA, a process known as transcription. In 2001 Kornberg published the first molecular snapshot of the protein machinery responsible — RNA polymerase — in action. The finding helped explain how cells express all the information in the human genome, and how that expression sometimes goes awry, leading to cancer, birth defects and other disorders. “I'm simply stunned. There are no other words,” said Kornberg, a professor of structural biology, this morning after the 2:30 a.m. call. “It’s such astonishing news.” The scene at Kornberg’s house was one of controlled chaos, with nonstop telephone calls from well wishers and media. Kornberg, who is also the Mrs. George A. Winzer Professor in Medicine, is the School of Medicine's second Nobel Prize winner this week. On Monday, Andrew Fire, PhD, professor of pathology and of genetics, was a winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on RNA interference. Together the two awards serve as a clarion announcement of RNA’s arrival in the scientific and medical spotlight. “Roger has been one of my role models for many years,” said Fire. “We did our post-docs at Cambridge in the same institute, and he’s been a tremendous help to me since I came to Stanford in 2003. Our fields are interestingly intertwined.” Kornberg’s research, and latest award, is a family affair: his father Arthur Kornberg, PhD, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1959 for studies of how genetic information is transferred from one DNA molecule to another. The Kornbergs are the sixth father-son team to win Nobel Prizes, in addition to one father-daughter team. “I have felt for some time that he richly deserved it,” said the elder Kornberg after hearing about his son’s award. “His work has been awesome.” Arthur Kornberg is the Emma Pfeiffer Merner Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus, at the School of Medicine. He learned of the award from a nephew in LaJolla, Calif., who had been called accidentally by someone looking for Roger. “Roger Kornberg is one of our nation’s treasured scientists,” said Philip Pizzo, MD, dean of the School of Medicine. “He has dedicated his life and career to using the powerful tools of structural biology to elucidate the molecular mechanism of transcription. His remarkable studies have been acclaimed for their elegance and technical sophistication as well as the unique insights they have yielded. His work has deepened our understanding of the ‘message of life’ and how it contributes to both normal and abnormal human development, health and disease.” Kornberg emphasized that the work required many contributions. “I am indebted to my colleagues,” he said. “This is not something that I did alone, or even with a small number of people. It is the result of the hard work, insight and inspiration of very many exceptionally talented Stanford students and post-docs.” Selective transcription of a cell’s tens of thousands of genes determines whether it becomes a neuron, a liver cell or a stem cell — and whether it develops normally or becomes a runaway cancer. The picture of RNA polymerase at work provided an atomic-level window into how the protein complex unzips and then re-zips the double-stranded DNA like a Ziploc bag after using the internal code to build a specific RNA molecule. It was a thing of beauty for biologists around the world.
“We were astonished by the intricacy of the complex, the elegance of the architecture, and the way that such an extraordinary machine evolved to accomplish these important purpose,” said Kornberg of the images he and his colleagues created. “RNA polymerase gives a voice to genetic information that, on its own, is silent.” Learning how that voice is amplified — and shushed — through the selective expression of genes is a critical stepping stone to many areas of biological and medical research. The path to the pictures involved a highly specialized field at the intersection of chemistry, biology and physics called crystallography. The technique, as much art as science, is the same one used by Francis Crick, Rosalind Franklin and James Watson to determine the double-stranded nature of DNA. In general, it involves evaporating a concentrated solution of a molecule until all that’s left are highly structured crystals somewhat like the crust of salt left behind by drying seawater. Extremely bright X-rays are then able to pinpoint the position of individual atoms and the data are used to produce a computer-generated representation of the molecule. Successfully crystallizing one molecule is a feat worth congratulating. Capturing the 10 subunits of RNA polymerase in action on the DNA was unthinkable. “It was a technical tour de force that took about 20 years of work to accomplish,” said Joseph Puglisi, PhD, professor and chair of the department of structural biology at the School of Medicine. “Like other great scientists, Roger doesn’t quit. He’s stubborn. A lot of scientists would have given up after five years.” Kornberg’s determination, coupled with his expertise in both crystallography and biochemistry, finally cracked the code. “I'm a biochemist and he’s a biochemist, but beyond that he’s a crystallographer, a structural chemist and a geneticist,” said Arthur Kornberg. Roger Kornberg devised a way to first initiate the process of transcription in a test tube and then stall it by withholding one of the building blocks of RNA. Crystallizing the frozen complex showed the relative positions of the polymerase, the DNA template and the growing RNA strand. “Professor Kornberg’s seminal research on transcription has been an exceptional contribution to the body of knowledge in fundamental biology,” said Stanford University President John Hennessy. “His work settled long-open questions about how genes communicate the information needed to make proteins and will help us understand a variety of diseases that can be caused by a failure in the transcription process. For the second time this week, a colleague’s achievement reminds us of the unique role universities have in advancing basic knowledge. We are proud to claim Professor Kornberg and his father Arthur as members of the Stanford family. I offer Roger warm congratulations on behalf of the entire university community.” Prior to beginning his work studying the molecular mechanism of transcription, Kornberg discovered the nucleosome, the basic unit from which all chromosomes are made. In 1974, as a junior scientist at Cambridge University, he proposed that the massive amounts of DNA contained in every cell could be compactly stored by wrapping it in its condensed form—the chromosome—around eight histone protein “spools” to form nucleosome “beads.” Kornberg and his wife and collaborator Yahli Lorch, PhD, associate professor of structural biology at Stanford, were instrumental in identifying the nucleosome as fundamental to transcription. Since then, it has been recognized that disruptions involving the nucleosome underlie many cancers and other diseases. Born in 1947, Kornberg was the first of three children born to Arthur Kornberg and his wife, Sylvy, who was also a biochemist working with Arthur. “Roger was a scientist from the beginning; He never showed any other interest,” said his brother, Thomas Kornberg, PhD, a professor of biochemistry at the University of California-San Francisco. “Both my parents had fine scientific minds and taught by example how to approach questions and problems in a logical, dispassionate way,” Roger Kornberg once said. “Science was a part of dinner conversation and an activity in the afternoons and on weekends. Scientific reasoning became second nature. Above all, the joy of science became evident to my brothers and me.” Kornberg was able to indulge his scientific bent early as a high school student working in the laboratory of Paul Berg, a colleague of his father’s at Stanford who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1980.
The senior Kornberg said his son’s winning did not come entirely out of the blue. He had mentioned the chemistry prize yesterday in a conversation with his son, who had just returned from a trip to Jerusalem. “I talked to him at length and couldn’t help but discuss this possibility — I know he’s been shortlisted in previous years,” said the elder Kornberg. “He dismissed it, saying it was a possibility but he didn’t expect it, but that’s the way it goes.” Arthur Kornberg said he had not imagined decades ago, when his son first began his career as a biochemist, that there would be a second Nobel laureate in the family. “Of course not,” he remarked. “But nature is so broad, profound and mysterious — one doesn’t know where it leads. And I would say among the people I know — and I have trained many hundreds — he has the clearest vision, sense of purpose and direction.” Pizzo paid tribute to the contributions of both father and son to Stanford. “Arthur Kornberg played a major role in transforming the Stanford University School of Medicine into a research-intensive powerhouse,” Pizzo said. “He was clearly productive in both his professional life and his private life—since he is the father of remarkably talented children, including Roger—who has sustained a legacy of brilliance and commitment to science and the deepening of our understanding of human life.” Roger Kornberg received his undergraduate degree in chemistry from Harvard in 1967 and his doctorate in chemistry from Stanford in 1972, studying the motion of lipids in cell membranes. He was a postdoctoral fellow and member of the scientific staff at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, U.K., from 1972 to 1975. He joined Harvard Medical School in 1976 as an assistant professor in biological chemistry. Kornberg returned to Stanford in 1978 as a professor in structural biology. He served as department chair from 1984 until 1992. Kornberg is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and an honorary member of the Japanese Biochemical Society. He is editor of the Annual Reviews of Biochemistry. He has written more than 180 peer-reviewed journal articles. His previous honors and awards include the Eli Lilly Award (1981), the Passano Award (1982), the Harvey Prize (1997), the Gairdner International Award (shared in 2000 with Robert Roeder), the Welch Award (2001) and the Grand Prix of the French Academy of Sciences (2002). “One of the benefits of the recognition of work such as ours is that it encourages continued support of fundamental issues like this one,” said Kornberg. “Many of the major advances in human health have their origins in the pursuit of basic biological knowledge.” His funding sources agree. “Through decades of elegant, state-of-the art studies in biochemistry and structural biology, Roger Kornberg has revealed the mechanism underlying how cells transcribe genetic information," said Jeremy M. Berg, PhD, director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which has funded Kornberg’s research since 1979. “This knowledge sheds light on a fundamental process that is key to health and disease. The achievement also demonstrates the power of innovative approaches to probe the many complicated molecular assemblies essential to life.” Despite the kudos, wining such a prestigious award can create complications: Kornberg was scheduled to fly to Pittsburgh tonight to receive the Dickson Prize in Medicine. When he called this morning to cancel his flight, the Travelocity operator wanted to know the reason. There was a pause, and a gulp. “Well,” he said. “I just won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.” There’s no word yet as to the operator’s response, but perhaps he can roll the ticket over to his upcoming trip to Sweden. “I'm looking forward to being in Stockholm, where we have many friends,” said Arthur Kornberg, remembering his own award 47 years ago. “They put on a great party.” |
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