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Thursday, November 27, 2008

As a re-elected mayor of Rehovot Shuki Forer must enforce Weizmann Institute pay local city taxes




The decision by israel Ministry of Internal Affairs made decades ago allowed Weizmann Institute not to pay local taxes. This was during the times the science existed for science, not money. Weizmann Institute presently is not a not-for-profit institution. It generates income through a variety of mechanisms, using it's commercialization daugther firm called Teva. Such tax exemption, therefore, is a basis for the curruption and financial irregularities at the Weizmann Institutes reported previously (including the report by State Comptroller). Shuki Forer previously talked on the need for the Weizmann's to pay local tazes. Therefore, as a re-elected mayor of Rehovot Shuki Forer must enforce Weizmann Institute pay local city taxes.

Also see:

Rehovot Wants Weizmann Institute to Pay Local Taxes (MyRehovot, 11/12/2004)

Excerpt: "The Rehovot municipality petitioned the High Court of Justice last week to order Minister of the Interior Avraham Poraz to cancel the Weizmann Institute's longstanding exemption from municipal property taxes. The municipality petitioned to prevent changes in the criteria that would further exempt Weizmann Institute from municipal taxes.

The petition states that in February 2003, the High Court of Justice ruled in favor of the Rehovot municipality and ordered the Ministry of the Interior to reconsider Weizmann Institute's exemption from municipal taxes, and to set criteria for exemptions from municipal taxes.

The Rehovot municipality claims that in the 14 months since the ruling, the Ministry of the Interior had not reviewed Weizmann Institute's eligibility for an exemption.

The municipality claims that it is absurd that the Weizmann Institute's NIS 660 million budget is 45% larger than the municipality's. The municipality claims to have a budget deficit of NIS 49 million and a cumulative deficit of NIS 130 million. It claims that Weizmann Institute should pay NIS 35 million a year in municipal taxes, which would cover two-thirds of the municipality's deficit."

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

Top ranking of Rehovot's Weizmann Institute could be faked

IsraelToday.co.il reports that "Two Israeli universities won the top two spots in a survey by The Scientist magazine on the best places for academics to work outside the United States. Number one on the list was the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot. Taking second place honors was Jerusalem's Hebrew University. The survey ranked universities by, among other things, salary, working conditions and available resources for researchers."

However, well knowing recent coppruption affairs at the Weizmann Institute of Science, enlighted by as powerful person, as previous President of WIS, Professor Ilan Chet, My Rehovot belief is that organized survey participation by Weizmann's students and academic staff may be faked and represent well planned action by the Institution Public Relation PR Department.

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Thursday, May 08, 2008

New program by Rehovot academic institute teaches science and math teachers

A new program at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot is aimed at raising the low level of Israeli high-school pupils knowledge of scientific subjects and math that has been exposed in recent years in international comparison studies.

The innovative "Caesarea Program" will soon be inaugurated at the Rehovot institute. Made possible by the Caesarea Edmond Benjamin de Rothschild Foundation, it will offer masters' degrees in science education to outstanding high-school and middle-school science and math teachers. The three-year curriculum, prepared by Weizmann faculty members, will include studies designed to broaden and deepen scientific knowledge, meetings with scientists working at the cutting edge of research and practice in applying innovative approaches to teaching. Participants will also conduct research in the field of science teaching and gain first-hand experience in leading original initiatives.

Teachers will study two days a week for the first two years and one day a week in the third year. The rest of the week, the participants can continue their normal teaching duties. Participants will be selected on the basis of recommendations and personal interviews, and each will receive a study grant in addition to an exemption from tuition.

For teachers who already have advanced degrees, the program offers a multi-track option that will integrate practical studies with research. Participants in this branch of the program are also eligible for study scholarships. A continuing education program will be offered to those who finish either track, in collaboration with the science teaching department and other scientific departments at Weizmann, and with the Davidson Institute of Science Education, which also conducts its activities there. The continuing program will support participants in developing and implementing innovative science education projects.

The Caesarea Program is open to outstanding science and math teachers who have at least three years of experience. Those teachers chosen to participate are required to commit themselves to teaching for at least another three years. Interested candidates can write to Miriam Carmeli at miriam.carmeli[at]weizmann.ac.il.

Source: Judy Siegel Itzkovich. New Worlds: New program teaches science and math teachers. Health and SciTech. JPost.com (3 May 2008) [FullText]

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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Rehovot scientists, activists debate if genetically modified foods are panacea or plague

The debate on genetically engineered crops could delay progress in addressing the global shortage of staple foods, Prof. Gad Galili of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot said Wednesday.

"Distribution of new, genetically engineered crops can help solve world hunger, but the question is where they are used," said Prof. Ayal Kimhi, head of teaching at the Hebrew University's Department of Agricultural Economics.

"If they're used in the US and Europe to increase production and send surpluses to poor countries, it will not solve the problem in poor countries, because farmers there would not be able to make a living" faced with competition from the cheaper imports, Kimhi said. "I think something positive that will come out of this crisis is an understanding that we need to change the agricultural policies in the West."

At a lecture at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Galili, of the Department of Plant Sciences, spoke of the benefits and hazards of genetically modified organisms.

"Between a quarter and half a million children in developing children go blind every year as a result of vitamin A deficiency, and many of them die," he said.

The United Nations resolved in 2002 to end vitamin A deficiency, but despite the distribution of vitamin supplements there had not been much progress, Galili said.

"The question is, can we solve this using genetic engineering?" he said, pointing to a photo of a grain of rice.

The outer shell of rice grains produces vitamin A, but the inside, consumed as conventional white rice, does not, Galili said.

"The tradition in developing countries is to process rice grains in a way that it loses its shell," he said. "And since these are countries where pride is very important, the only way is to try and create vitamin A on the inside of rice grains as well."

According to Galili, this cannot be done by regular breeding, but only via genetic engineering.

By transferring six different genes from the shell to the core, scientists have created vitamin A-rich golden rice. Adults only need 300 grams of golden rice to satisfy their daily vitamin A requirement, Galili said.

Genetically modified organisms can also be more resistant to disease, pesticides, drought and temperature fluctuations, as well as higher in protein, vitamins, minerals and amino acids, Galili said.

But the golden rice and some other genetically modified organisms have yet to be tested or enter the market because of the controversy and public concern that surround the issue.

"There are ethical reasons, that God is the creator of new life forms; health issues, concerning long-term effects; ecological concerns - what would happen if GMO breed with other plants? And a lot of commercial concerns, that someone will find a way to profit off from this," Galili said.

Although scientists do not know the long-term effects of genetically modified organisms consumption, Galili said they were safer than conventionally interbred ones because scientists had full control over all the variables in the gene transfer.

As for the risk of contamination, Galili said, "If you put a virus into GMO, it will spread. But we safeguard it, there are expert committees that approve GMO, and one thing is certain: If someone wanted to insert a virus genome, or there was a contamination risk, it would not be approved."

Source: Gal Tziperman Lotan. Scientists, activists debate if genetically modified foods are panacea or plague. JPost.com (30 April 2008) [FullText]

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Saturday, April 19, 2008

Martin S. Kimmel, 92, Co-Founder of Retail Real Estate Firm and Rehovot's Weizmann

By Dennis Hevesi

Also see: Legacy.rehovot.org, Obituaries and Guest book we site of Rehovot, Israel

Martin S. Kimmel, a real estate developer who tracked power company trucks throughout South Florida in the early 1960s to find sites for what eventually became the nation’s largest builder of strip malls, died Tuesday in Manhattan. He was 92.

The cause was congestive heart failure, his stepdaughter, Betsy Karel, said.

With a handshake, Mr. Kimmel and his friend Milton Cooper started the Kimco Realty Corporation in 1960. Until the corporation went public 30 years later, the partners never saw a need to formalize their business relationship, Mr. Cooper said Wednesday.

Starting with a “mundane pedestrian strip” on Coral Way in Miami with a Zayre discount store and two other stores, Mr. Cooper said, the company has built a portfolio that now includes about 1,900 properties in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Chile and Brazil — approximately 1,100 of them strip shopping centers. The value of the common stock of Kimco, based in New Hyde Park, N.Y., was $286 million in 1991; today it is about $10.2 billion.

With that first shopping strip under construction, “Cooper and Kimmel quickly learned the tricks of the local real estate game,” a 1998 article in Institutional Investor magazine said. “Kimmel would follow utility trucks to find out where new power lines were being laid,” an early sign of new residential development.

“That’s how we knew where the traffic was going,” Mr. Kimmel recalled in the article.

Though lacking the luster of skyscrapers or enclosed malls, the strips are cheaper and easier to build and rapidly generate profits. Of Kimco’s 1,200 shopping centers, 135 are now in Florida and about 100 in New York State.

“Kimco has become the king of U.S. strip shopping centers,” Institutional Investor said.

Born in the Bronx on April 9, 1916, Mr. Kimmel was one of four sons of Henry and Emma Kimmel. His father managed a lighting fixture store. After briefly attending Syracuse University, Mr. Kimmel served in the Army in the Pacific during World War II.

After the war, while working with his father at the lighting store, he became acquainted with home builders and began questioning them about the intricacies of construction. Eventually, that led to the start of a company that built garden apartments and town houses on Long Island. With profits from those developments, Mr. Kimmel and Mr. Cooper started Kimco, aware that South Florida was being transformed from vacation destination to retirement haven.

In addition to his stepdaughter, Betsy Karel of Washington, Mr. Kimmel is survived by his wife, the former Helen Lyttle; another stepdaughter, Abby Leigh of Manhattan; a stepson, Alexei Hay of Manhattan; a son from an earlier marriage that ended in divorce, Adam; and four grandchildren.

Mr. Kimmel retired from Kimco in 1991 and concentrated on philanthropy. Debra LaMorte, the senior vice president for development at New York University, said Mr. Kimmel and his wife made important gifts to the university, among them financing the Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for Stem Cell Biology; creating a professorship of molecular immunology; and contributing to the construction of the Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life. This 210,000-square-foot granite-and-glass student center at Washington Square houses the 1,022-seat Skirball Center for the Performing Arts.

Mr. Kimmel and his wife also made major contributions to the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel. They financed the acquisition of 50 acres by the institute, increasing its land by 20 percent, and established a major award program for research scientists there.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction of April 18, 2008

An obituary on Thursday about Martin S. Kimmel, a developer of strip malls, misstated the relationship of one of his survivors. Abby Leigh is his stepdaughter, not his daughter.

Source: Dennis Hevesi. Martin S. Kimmel, 92, Co-Founder of Retail Real Estate Firm, Dies (17 April 2008) Correction Appended. New York Times [FullText]

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Prostate cancer and team Science: Cooperating for a cure

By Jenny Hazan

According to the latest estimates from the Prostate Cancer Foundation, more than 218,000 men in the United States alone will be diagnosed with prostate cancer this year. The disease strikes one in six men. If detected early enough, there is a high success rate with traditional treatments such as radiation, chemotherapy, surgery (prostatectomy), hormone therapy, cryotherapy, and high-frequency radiotherapy (Hi-Fu). But the side effects of such treatments can be severe, requiring patients to undergo long and painful recoveries and in the long-term, causing impotency or incontinency. What's more, in all cases the collateral damage caused by one treatment closes the door to subsequent therapies, so healing is hope-ess in cases where the cancer is not cured in one shot or metastasizes to other parts of the body.

At least that was the prostate cancer treatment landscape until the beginning of 2000, when the research outcome of a unique team of scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, had appeared to enable a better remedy. Nine years earlier, the director of the Weizmann Institute's Avron-Wilstatter Minerva Center for Research in Photosynthesis, Dr. Avigdor Scherz, and the head of the Institute's Department of Biological Services, Dr. Yoram Salomon, helmed jointly the basic idea. By 1995, they had already gathered a relatively small group of chemists, biologists, pharmacologists, physicians, and physicists who had proven their novel concept. At the end of 1996, industry joined in to boost up the pharmaceutical development. Three years later, following an extensive basic and pre-clinical research, a new compound and tailored technology emerged.

TEAM SCIENCE

The treatment is nontoxic and there are no long-term side effects. It takes only 10 minutes and is a non-invasive, potentially outpatient procedure. Best of all, the remedy doesn't cut patients off from subsequent treatments. In clinical trials, 50% of patients have been cured with a single treatment and possibly 70-80% may be cured after two. It is called Vascular Targeted Photodynamic Therapy (VTP), and it may revolutionize the way science approaches cancer treatment.

How did this small team come so far so quickly? What is the secret to their solution? How did they manage to succeed where other major universities and research institutes have failed?

According to Salomon, it is all a matter of opening the lines of communication between disciplines. Whereas classical formats of multidisciplinary scientific research consist of interactions between whole departments at different institutes around the globe, the Weizmann Institute team gathered representatives from each discipline and put them shoulder-to-shoulder in the same lab—an innovative new approach to scientific collaboration.

"Wherever you have contact between disciplines, that's where new ideas form because you are inspired by your environment and you can sometimes bridge concepts that you otherwise wouldn't be able to bridge," says Salomon. 'The idea for VTP never would have come up if we hadn't sat together and bridged the different disciplines we're in."

DR. AVIGDOR SCHERZ

The story of bacteriochlorophyll (Bchl)-VTP begins in 1990 in a hallway of the Ullmann Building at the Weizmann Institute, where Dr. Yoram Salomon, who at the time was conducting research on the role of hormones in tumor biology as a professor in the Department of Biological Services, ran into his younger brother's former high school classmate, Dr. Avigdor Scherz, then an associate professor in the Institute's Department of Biological Chemistry.

Driven to cure the cancer of a recently diagnosed member of his own family, Scherz had switched the focus of his lab from plant photosynthesis to chlorophyll-based cancer drugs. At this chance meeting in the corridor, he asked Salomon whether he had any cancer cells on which to test his new development. Salomon offered Scherz melanoma cells. "Our collaboration began at that moment," recalls Scherz.
By 1991, the two professors had co-opted their labs and gathered together a team of some eight scientists representing different disciplines and varying developmental stages in the life of a new treatment—from basic research to the pharmaceutical industry to clinical application.

"What we developed is a kind of closed circle, wherein there was a very intimate level of interaction between all the branches," explains Scherz. Their idea was to create the ideal feedback mechanism, whereby expertise from all areas could inform each other, creating the most efficient route to test new ideas and discover solutions. "We didn't just want the group to be multidisciplinary in the sense of having different people from different disciplines communicate together; we had our sights set on developing in all scientists involved a multidisciplinary way of thinking. Later on this was accomplished by a daily and completely transparent communication with the industrial partner's experts. This model for collaboration represents an entirely new scientific approach."

The concept of the unique new lab's development, however, was not entirely new. VTP takes its basic idea from its predecessor, Photodynamic Therapy" (PDT). In classical PDT, a cancer patient is injected with a light-sensitive pigment-based chemical ("sensitizer") that when exposed to light forms radicals that in turn excite oxygen molecules to oxidize, thus creating a toxic internal environment that kills tumor cells.

While it is an effective technique, the problem with classical PDT is that the sensitizers used show no tissue or organ selectivity, need hours to days to absorb into the tumor cells before treatment, and slowly exit the body afterward. The result is that patients continue to be sensitive to regular light and cannot go outside for several weeks or months after the treatment; since they are at risk of being burned by the light of the sun. Moreover, current sensitizers enable treatment of shallow tumors because of their limited physico-chemical properties.

Until Scherz and Salomon's lab, scientists had not figured out a way to harness effectively the photosensitization capabilities of chlorophyll in the photodynamic treatment, since in their native form these molecules present extremely low solubility disabling their use as vascular photosensitizers. Scherz's lab discovered ways to modify the hydrophobicity of the chlorophylls. But there was still work to be done. Although the chlorophyll-based drug was a big improvement over existing sensitizers, the type of light (i.e., sunlight) required to excite it could only penetrate into tissue at relatively shallow depths. Hence, Scherz proposed the use of a different kind of chlorophyll, namely, a type of Bchl that exists in the depths of the ocean and relies on infrared light (which can penetrate more deeply into human tissue) to photosynthesize. It turned out, in experiments conducted in the two labs, that this discovery enabled the first successful treatments of melanoma tumors and consequently, patent application in 1993 for non-toxic chlorophyll-based sensitizers to be used in PDT.

"It had a lot of advantages over the pigments that were used at the time," says Scherz. "Namely, chlorophyll doesn't stay in the system very long. After all, it's in every piece of lettuce we eat."

In 1995, Scherz and Salomon's lab patented the first PDT containing Bchl-based sensitizer, and in 1999 a more water-soluble version of it: Tookad. This name, which is the Hebrew wording for "the center or warmth of light," was coined after a passage in the Bible, that deals with a cure delivered by God to humans. The birth of Tookad marked the dawn of Bchl-VTP and a possible new age of cancer management.

DR. YORAM SALOMON

According to Dr. Salomon, who did his B.Sc, M.Sc, and Ph.D. in biochemistry at the Hebrew University jn Jerusalem before becoming a professor at the Weizmann Institute, the unique kind of collaboration that gave rise to Tookad would not likely take place outside of the Weizmann Institute or outside of Israel, for that matter. "I have to give the Institute itself credit because they made our collaboration very easy," he says. "There are no barriers there. It's a very cooperative environment."

"We use our knowledge and intuition to find solutions that work, then go backward to understand in greater detail why they worked. Most scientists around the world function in the opposite way..."

As for Israeli science in general, Salomon says that the Institute's approval of the lab's avantgarde approach is indicative of a general trend in the country's scientific culture. "Rather than conduct years and years of testing on chlorophyll, for instance, we just jumped to the end and said, 'Does it work? Good. Now, let's see how it works,' he explains. "We use our knowledge and intuition to find solutions that work, then go backward to understand in greater detail why they worked. Most scientists around the world function in the opposite way, so we really operate against the dogma."

It's for that reason the lab's initial findings, while extremely impressive, were rejected out-of-hand by the scientific community at large and why it took so long—nearly five years—to get their methodology tested in clinical trials.

"Initially, we had lots of problems; much of what we did was not accepted by colleagues in the field. Our papers were refused by labs around the world; they wouldn't even test it before they rejected it," says Salomon.

For instance, because classical PDT required a lag time of 24 hours or more between injection of the sensitizes and illumination of the infected tissues (in order for the drug to penetrate into the cells), the scientific community was apt to reject VTP's biochemical mechanism, which required immediate or simultaneous illumination in order to be effective. "We had to work very hard to change the scientific community's status quo," he says.

It wasn't until Scherz and Salomon convinced Dutch pharmaceutical company Steba Beheer NV to come on board in 1996 that other institutes agreed to start testing Tookad in pre-clinical trials. Says Salomon, "Slowly, but surely, our methodology was taken seriously."

Rather than classical PDT, which targets the tumor cells themselves, VTP targets the blood vessels that supply the tumors. According to Salomon, the idea to cut off blood flow to the tumor was also not a new one. But the problem with the chemicals used in anti-angiogenic therapies (i.e., therapies that inhibit the growth of blood vessels) is that the drugs used only antagonize the creation of the vessels, but don't end their construction completely. When the treatment stops, the blood vessels begin to grow again. In conjunction, there is the issue of drug resistance.
By contrast, VTP completely destroys the blood vessels that feed the tumor; the tumor becomes schemic, necrotic, and is finally eradicated and carried out of the body by the immune system.

With VTP, doctors first conduct an MRI and ultrasound to map out the tumor and establish a plan of attack. The drug is infused into the bloodstream via an IV, and while it is continually distributed throughout the body, the tumor area is illuminated with a series of carefully placed fiber optic lasers (so as to confine the illumination as close as possible to the treated zone). Within approximately 10 minutes, the illuminated tumor blood vessels narrow and fill with clots. Blood flow to the tumor stops. Five minutes later, more than 90% of the drug is cleared from the bloodstream.

The best part is that there are no side effects to VTP. There is absolutely no damage to tissue or cells that are not illuminated, and none of the three elements that comprise VTP— Bchl, oxygen, and infrared light—are toxic in and of themselves. But together, they're a lethal combination—for tumors.

Currently, Tookad is being tested in advanced Phase 2 clinical trials in France (for a degenerative eye disease called macular degeneration); in the UK, on prostate cancer patients with no previous treatment history who chose VTP as their first therapy; and in Canada, at Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto and Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal, where they are conducting "salvage therapy" aimed at curing patients with a recurrence of prostate cancer after first treatment radiation. Phase 3 testing is scheduled to take place this summer.

DR. ALEXANDER BRANDIS

While those clinical trials are taking place, the Weizmann Institute group continues to develop an arsenal of new compounds, aimed at different types of cancer, regimes of treatment, and diagnostics.

The chief molecular engineer who is enabling the synthesis of the new compounds is Dr. Alexander Brandis, a Ph.D. in chemistry and technology of natural products from the Lomonosov Institute of Fine Chemical Technolqgyjn Moscow, Russia, and a double postdoctorate in biochemical studies on chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll from the Weizmann Institute in Scherz's lab.

For Brandis, working on the VTP project came as a welcome surprise. It was merely by chance that he had heard of the Weizmann Institute team and their work at one of the first meetings that was allowed to take place of the USSR's Society of Jewish Scientists and Engineers in Moscow in 1991.

"When Gorbachev came into power, there were a lot of new things in the air, and a lot of Jewish societies started in Moscow. This was one of them," explains Brandis. "I participated in the Societies' Israel Science Day, and just happened to pass my CV to one of the representatives from the Weizmann Institute who was there."
Brandis had been working on compounds for PDT for several years and, in fact, engineered one of the first sensi-tizers for use in PDT. "Photodynamic therapy was extremely interesting to me because it was a new area with so many potential applications," he says.

On the afternoon of Israel Science Day, Brandis received a call from the Weizmann Institute representative encouraging him to apply to do his postdoc in Rehovot. "It was Israel's Independence Day, and my father's birthday," recalls Brandis. "I will never forget that day."

Brandis moved to Israel from Moscow in 1992 to join the fledgling team. "From the moment I met Scherz, we started coordinating," he says. "It was an ideal adoption. I found exactly the place where I had to be to continue my career."

The Israeli approach to scientific research was a shock to Brandis's system. "Although our lab in Moscow was a very well-established alma mater, we had very little direct contact with labs around the world," explains Brandis. During that time in the USSR, scientists had access to research papers from around the globe but did not conduct many cooperative efforts with scientists abroad. "For me, working in Israel opened up this whole new world of international collaboration. After 15 years, this global approach is still extremely exciting to me."

The VTP team took that collaboration to a whole different level for Brandis. "In Moscow, my lab used to synthesize a compound, then test it, then send the sample to another institute, then wait for their reply," he explains. "The first time I came to the lab at Weizmann, it was so strange to see all the scientists multitasking. Here, you don't have a department where everyone does his own work, individually; you have a few people who do a lot of different things.

"In our group now, the close proximity between disciplines not only makes the process much faster, but the collaborative work sharpens your intuition. Getting feedback every day and discussing problems in real time makes a huge difference to one's state of alertness."

That's not to say that the experience hasn't had its challenges. While he loves the multidisciplinary structure of the group, it also makes creating compounds more difficult, since there are more factors to consider. "Rather than just synthesize new compounds that will be effective from a physical standpoint, we have to think ahead about whether they will be viable from a clinical and pharmaceutical perspective," explains Brandis. 'The compound may be effective, but what's it worth if it causes bad side effects, or if it's too expensive to be mass produced?"
Since so many cures have been serendipitously discovered (i.e., while searching for a cure to one affliction, a researcher stumbles upon a cure for a totally unrelated problem), Brandis says the group's new approach to contextual thinking is extremely challenging, since his natural inclination is to follow' his molecules to see where they lead. "Participating in the group has required a real switch from question-oriented research to objective-oriented research."

On a personal note, adjusting to Israel has also been a big challenge for Brandis, who although Jewish, had never been to Israel until he came to the Weizmann Institute. "Coming to Israel was itself an adventure. It was very strange for me to go from living in Moscow, with 15-million people, to living in Rehovot," says Brandis. "But, I met my wife here and now we have two daughters. I am very happy."

EFRAT RUBINSTEIN, M.Sc.

One of the most intriguing new compounds the team is working on is a more sophisticated version of Bchl, one that exclusively targets tumor blood vessels so that the drug does not have the potential to affect all tissues that are subjected to light subsequent to infusion. Instead, it only affects tumor vessels, so it's possible to hone in even closer on the targeted tissues.

The woman behind this new innovation-in-progress is Efrat Rubenstein, one of 14 Ph.D. students hailing from disciplines including computational chemistry, chemistry, biology, and pharmacology. These students comprise the basic research arm of the group and whom Scherz „ dubs "the team's lifeline."

"My new development capitalizes on the fact that some tumor blood vessels—including those that feed brain tumors, metastatic breast, melanoma, and lung tumors—have special receptors," explains Rubinstein, a student of both the Institute's Departments of Plant Sciences and Biological Regulation. "I am adding a sort of 'homing device' to the sensitizer in order to target these specific receptors.
"The benefit of this new drug is that because it's more directed, there can be no accidental peripheral damage to 'good vessels' and tissues surrounding the tumor vessels, and it will spare as much as possible the collagen supporting matrix, which plays a big role in the body's natural healing process."

Since commencing her Ph.D. in 2001, Rubinstein has synthesized, developed, and tested in vitro a large number of VTP agents. "Before you can check the agents on animals (in vivo) you have to test them extensively on cell cultures (in vitro)," explains Rubinstein. "But there is a problem in the correlation: The cell environment is very different from the animal environment and oftentimes what responds in vitro does not respond or work in vivo."

According to Rubinstein, the process of in vitro testing can be extremely taxing. "It's very hard mentally because you experience so many disappointments along the way." She says that there is often no correlation between what should work theoretically and what does work in practical application. "You have to be very strong to continue."

'This sort of frustration is the real test of one student or one scientist versus another," comments Scherz. "Either you take it in stride and learn to benefit from it, or it breaks you down."

It's precisely because there are so many disappointments that the moments of accomplishment are so exhilarating. For instance, Rubinstein says she will never forget the moment that one of her sensitizers elicited a positive response to a cancer sample. "I was at the special lab in Jerusalem, about halfway through testing some 250 samples, all of which had produced a flat line," she recalls. 'Then I put this cancer tumor sample into the machine and the line started to peak, indicating that a reaction was indeed taking place.

"At first, I thought the machine was broken," she says. 'Then I tested and retested and retested again, and I realized it wasn't broken at all. I was onto something! As long as I live, I will never forget that moment. It was August 23, 2004. We submitted the patent one year later."

Rubinstein, a new mother of two, completed her B.Pharm. at Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1995. Straight out of school, she began to work at Super-Pharm Pharmacy in Rishon LeZion, a position she kept throughout the duration of her M.Sc. in pharmacology at Tel Aviv University, and right up until she started her Ph.D. "I wasn't happy just to work in a pharmacy," she says. "Something was always missing. After my master's, I understood that I had to do research full-time, but it had to be in a field with clinical applications."

That's when she discovered the group at the Weizmann Institute. "I can't think of any other place where I would be able to be involved, step-by-step, from the very beginning of separating molecules and synthesizing them in vitro to seeing my agents being used in pre-clinical and clinical applications," she says. "It is impossible to describe the joy of nurturing this little molecule into something that really works. Being part of this group has been a dream come true."

According to Rubinstein, who will submit her Ph.D. thesis on April 30, 2007, being part of the group has been a very special experience for other reasons, too. "When I look at the papers and abstracts from the big conferences and see how many authors and university departments and research institutes are involved, and how much support projects receive from big companies, it makes me very proud," she says. "We are only a little group, a few people, and we are not accompfishing less than them.
"When it comes to finding a cure for cancer, there is still a long way to go," she says. "But we have already made a contribution that has been way beyond our expectations."

DR. NATALIA KOUDINOVA

As Rubinstein says, there is a big difference between in vitro and in vivo testing. That's where Dr. Natalia Koudinova comes in. As head of Steba Israel's Biological Unit, Koudinova serves as an essential conduit between the lab at Weizmann and the pharmaceutical company.

Since she assumed the position three years ago, Koudinova has screened dozens of compounds in vivo, between those produced by Steba's R&D Department and those produced by the lab at the Weizmann Institute. Altogether, she has recommended only six for pre-clinical or Phase 1 clinical trials.

According to Scherz, Koudinova is an essential member of the Weizmann team, since she is in a very unique position to diffuse the tension inherent between the lab and the pharmaceutical company, or between research and industry related primarily to issues of intellectual property (IP). "Dr. Koudinova and the rest of the Steba team bridge a very important gap and replace natural hostility with constructive cooperation," says Scherz. "Without this collaboration, several of our compounds might never have made it into circulation and the development of others would take forever."

Like Brandis, Koudinova came to the Weizmann Institute group quite by accident. Her husband, a neuroscientist from Moscow, was invited to participate in a project at the Department of Brain Research at the Weizmann Institute in 1997. She followed him to Israel. After working for two years on her postdoc on Alzheimer's disease at the Institute's Department of Neurobiology, Koudinova, a medical doctor who completed her Ph.D. on lipid metabolism in Alzheimer's at the Peoples' Friendship University in Moscow, met Dr. Salomon.

"I never anticipated I would end up in the field of PDT," says Koudinova. "But before I knew it, I was developing the animal prostate cancer and bone metastases models." It was Koudinova who conducted the first study that showed that Tookad was a successful treatment for human prostate carcinoma and bone metastases. More than 80% of the animals used in preliminary tests were completely cured of large
tumors-via VTP. It was these tests that became the backbone of Koudinova's second postdoc, which she completed in 2004. Just after she finished her degree, her Israeli visa expired. "All of a sudden, it looked as though I would have to leave Israel, which was such a pity because I loved Israel and the group and I didn't want to go anywhere else," recalls Koudinova, the team's only non-Jewish member. "Although science is a very international thing, when you are working in a lab, you are not just doing science; you are working with people," she says. "The lab environment at the Weizmann Institute was unlike any other lab I had worked in before. It was an open, communicative, social environment. I really enjoyed it."
Salomon and Scherz took action on Koudinova's behalf and wrote letters to the Ministry of the Interior appealing to the authorities to grant Koudinova an extension. "She was a key member of our team," comments Scherz. "The amount of knowledge and skills that she had acquired over the years was essential for the fast development of new products. It was really in the best interests of the State of Israel to let her stay." Koudinova was awarded temporary residency (giving her three more years) in 2004. "Finally, I could breathe a sigh of relief," she says. "I was very lucky."

Around the same time, Steba decided to establish an independent affiliate lab in Israel almost exclusively geared to supporting new research and development in the field of VTP. The timing couldn't have been more perfect," says Koudinova.
Then three years later, at the start of 2007, Koudinova found herself in a similar pickle. "Again, we applied to the Ministry of the Interior," she says. "Only this time, I got extra lucky and they awarded me permanent residency. So, now I can live the rest of my years in Israel worry-free.

"It's been strange to have my professional scientific life tied in so closely to my personal life," she notes. "But in the end, I love my work, I love this country, and I know that this is where my family belongs."

DR. SMADAR SCHREIBER

According to Salomon, the sort of tension that exists between the research and pharmaceutical fields of medical development tends to exist similarly between the research and clinical fields. In the case of VTP, which requires far fewer human and hospital resources—and, ultimately, less expense tharr traditional cancer therapies—this tension is particularly pronounced. "In medicine, there is usually opposition to new approaches," says Salomon, who explains that there is also the issue of having to train in order to learn how to implement the new technique.

Dr. Smadar Schreiber is a clear exception. The practicing doctor in the PDT Unit at the Assaf Harofe Medical Center near Tel Aviv, Schreiber's primary contribution to the team is her firsthand experience.

"I am actually putting current photodynamic technology into practice," says Schreiber, who uses PDT to treat dermatological ailments such as skin lesions, viral warts and other viral lesions, psoriasis, acne, and of course, cancer. "The patients react very well to the treatment. Side effects are local and transient, and although there is usually an inflammatory reaction for a few days following the treatment, it only takes three or four weeks after one treatment for the lesions to disappear completely and to be replaced with heafthy, younger-looking skin."

In addition to bringing firsthand PDT experience to the group, Schreiber was the first to test Tookad-VTP in pre-dinical trials. "I was the first to test the mode of application and successfully demonstrate that it worked against tumors in animal models," explains Schreiber. "I think this was a very important contribution to the group."

It's worth noting that Schreiber did not get her start in PDT. Since she graduated from medical school at the Technion Institute of Technology in Haifa in 1986, she worked first as a physician in the IDF, then as a researcher at a manufacturer of light-based devices for medical and cosmetic purposes, and finally as a developer of clinical protocols for doctoral students around the world. It wasn't until she began her residency in plastic surgery at the Weizmann Institute in 1997 that all of her myriad work experience seemed to come together. Before she knew it, she had extended her basic science requirement into a Ph.D. project on the effects of bacteri-ochlorophylls on tumors and became a vital member of the VTP team. "I never thought I would end up in this field," she says. "But what I am doing now really is a combination of everything I have learned."

According to Schreiber, this flexibility to combine the various elements of her knowledge base into one useful application is unique to Israeli science. "The standards of science and technology are very high in Israel," says Schreiber. "At the same time^there is always"a. place for innovation and the opportunity to pursue radically new ideas."

VTP is one such pursuit. "Photodynamic treatments have such great potential. What is being done now is only the beginning; it is going to evolve to apply to many medical specialties and many different usages," says the mother of three from Gan Hatikvah, who names gastric cancers, internal infections, restenosis, hema-tology, and melanoma among the likely future applications.

To date, VTP has been tested on colon carcinomas, prostate cancers, sarcomas, liver cancers, breast tumors, brain tumors, pancreatic cancers, and various metastases. According to Scherz, the group's immediate objective over the next two years is to cover the entire field of prostate ailments, from cancer and metastases to enlarged prostate and benign prostate treatment at various stages. After that, the team intends to tackle nonlocalized cancers such as leukemia. "Right now, we can only use this method to treat cancers wherein we know their location," explains Salomon. "Cancers without specific locations are on our list of upcoming challenges." "But," says Scherz with a hopeful smile, "the more we advance, the more the possibility for future developments and future applications opens up."
"In the end, one thing is certain," adds Salomon. "The more we collaborate, the greater our chances of success".

Source: Jenny Hazan. Cooperating for a cure. Lifestyles International edition: www.lifestylesmagazine.com (May 2007) pp.33-39

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Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Weizmann Institute Science Festival: Smart Fun for the Whole Family

Where: The Weizmann Institute Science, Rehovot, Herzl Street, 5 min walk from Rehovot Train Station

When: April 23-24, 2008

This year’s Garoon Family Science Festival at the Weizmann Institute will be bigger and better than ever. Adults and children alike can experience the thrill of scientific discovery through a wide variety of exhibits, competitions, performances, workshops, tours, lectures and interactive demonstrations geared to every age group.

Among the activities to choose from: interactive workshops on everything from acrobatics to thinking games and “scientific” ice cream; talks on the science of films and techniques of film animation; panel discussions with scientists; lectures on current science topics; as well as the chance to learn how to extract DNA from lettuce or build a rocket. A special exhibit will show art created by children for the “Draw Me a Scientist” contest.

This year’s Science Festival will also feature an assortment of musical performances and workshops including “Journey from Beach to Drum,” with Chen Cymbalista and the Ashkelon Chamber Orchestra, as well as Gypsy-Balkan music, wandering Brazilian performances combining dance, movement and rhythm, a show featuring new musical instruments and a workshop in constructing musical instruments from recycled materials and junk.

This year’s contests, which require advance registration, are the “flying egg,” and a team treasure hunt. For more information and contest registration: 08-934-3959.

The festival will take place April 23-24 from 10:30 to 18:00. Information will be available to the public through the festival switchboard: 08-934-6090.

Journalists (only) who would like more information can call the Weizmann Institute Publications and Media Relations Department: Malka Barkan: 08-934-3856 or Tamar Gilboa: 08-934-3851, 054-263-8877.

Source: Weizmann Institute Media Department

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Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Rehovot scientists succeed in designing artificial enzymes that also undergo “evolution in a test tube”

BIRTH OF AN ENZYME

Mankind triumphed in a recent “competition” against nature when scientists succeeded in creating a new type of enzyme for a reaction for which no naturally occurring enzyme has evolved. This achievement opens the door to the development of a variety of potential applications in medicine and industry.

Enzymes are, without a doubt, a valuable model for understanding the intricate works of nature. These molecular machines – which without them, life would not exist – are responsible for initiating chemical reactions within the body. Millions of years of natural selection have fine-tuned the activity of such enzymes, allowing chemical reactions to take place millions of times faster. In order to create artificial enzymes, a comprehensive understanding of the structure of natural enzymes, their mode of action, as well as advanced protein engineering techniques is needed. A team of scientists from the University of Washington, Seattle, and the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel, made a crucial breakthrough toward this endeavor. Their findings have recently been published in the scientific journal Nature.

Enzymes are biological catalysts that are made from a string of amino acids, which fold into specific three-dimensional protein structures. The scientists’ aim was to create an enzyme for a specific chemical reaction whereby a proton (a positively charged hydrogen atom) is removed from carbon – a highly demanding reaction and rate-determining step in numerous processes for which no enzymes currently exist, but which would be beneficial in helping to speed up the reaction. During the first heat of the “competition,” the research team designed the “heart” of the enzymatic machine – the active site – where the chemical reactions take place.

The second heat of the competition was to design the backbone of the enzyme, i.e., to determine the sequence of the 200 amino acids that make up the structure of the protein. This was no easy feat seeing as there is an infinite number of ways to arrange 20 different types of amino acids into strings of 200. But in practice, only a limited number of possibilities are available as the sequence of amino acids determines the structure of the enzyme, which in turn, determines its specific activity. Prof. David Baker of the University of Washington, Seattle, used novel computational methodologies to scan tens of thousands of sequence possibilities, identifying about 60 computationally designed enzymes that had the potential to carry out the intended activity. Of these 60 sequences tested, eight advanced to the next “round” having showed biological activity. Of these remaining eight, three sequences got through to the “final stage,” which proved to be the most active. Drs. Orly Dym and Shira Albeck of the Weizmann Institute’s Structural Biology Department solved the structure of one of the final contestants, and confirmed that the enzymes created were almost identical to the predicted computational design.

But the efficiency of the new enzymes could not compare to that of naturally-occurring enzymes that have evolved over millions of years. This is where “mankind” was on the verge of losing the competition to nature, until Prof. Dan Tawfik and research student Olga Khersonsky of the Weizmann Institute’s Biological Chemistry Department stepped in, whereby they developed a method allowing the synthetic enzymes to undergo “evolution in a test tube” that mimics natural evolution. Their method is based on repeated rounds of random mutations followed by scanning the mutant enzymes to find the ones who showed the most improvement in efficiency. These enzymes then underwent further rounds of mutation and screening. Results show that it takes only seven rounds of evolution in a test tube to improve the enzymes’ efficiency 200-fold compared with the efficiency of the computer-designed template, resulting in a million-fold increase in reaction rates compared with those that take place in the absence of an enzyme.

The scientists found that the mutations occurring in the area surrounding the enzyme’s active site caused minor structural changes, which in turn, resulted in an increased chemical reaction rate. These mutations therefore seem to correct shortcomings in the computational design, by shedding light on what might be lacking in the original designs. Other mutations increased the flexibility of the enzymes, which helped to increase the speed of substrate release from the active site.

“Reproducing the breathtaking performances of natural enzymes is a daunting task, but the combination of computational design and molecular in vitro evolution opens up new horizons in the creation of synthetic enzymes,” says Tawfik. “Thanks to this research, we have gained a better understanding of the structure of enzymes as well as their mode of action. This, in turn, will allow us to design and create enzymes that nature itself had not ‘thought’ of, which could be used in various processes, such as neutralizing poisons, developing medicines, as well as for many further potential applications.”

Prof. Dan Tawfik's research is supported by the J & R Center for Scientific Research; the Jack Wolgin Prize for Scientific Excellence; Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel; Mr. Rowland Schaefer, New York, NY; and the estate of Fannie Sherr, New York, NY. Prof. Tawfik is the incumbent of the Elaine Blond Career Development Chair.

Source: Weizmann Institute Media and Publications Department

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Friday, March 14, 2008

Olmert praises scientists for 'coming home', has nothing to offer except of corrupted university system

Original title: Olmert praises scientists for 'coming home'

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert met at Rehovot's Weizmann Institute of Science on Tuesday with four young scientists who returned to Israel after living abroad for years because of the lack of opportunities for teaching and research here.

"The larger the institute gets, the more scientists will join so it can advance excellence in Israeli society for all of us," Olmert said.

He was received on campus by institute president Prof. Daniel Zajfman, who presented four outstanding young scientists among 16 who returned to Israel and joined the Weizmann Institute faculty during the past year.

The four were Dr. Avishai Gal-Yam (an astronomer); Dr. Nirit Davidovich (a physicist); Dr. Michal Sharon (a biochemist); and Dr. Roni Paz (a brain researcher).

Olmert described the Weizmann Institute as a "pearl in the crown of Israeli society."

He later met with youths who are neither studying in high school nor working full time, but are part of a work-study project initiated by Dr. Ovad Kerem of the Davidson Institute for Science Education of the Weizmann Institute.

Source: Judy Siegel Itzkovich. Olmert praises scientists for 'coming home' JPost.com (11 March 2008) [FullText]

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Sunday, February 24, 2008

US National Institutes of Health and Major Donor Lorry Loker informed Over Rehovot's Weizmann Institute's Abusive Brain Experiments on Cats, Monkeys

Peta Media Center reports, that the organization "filed a complaint with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and asked the agency to investigate alleged abuse of cats and monkeys in brain experiments being conducted at the Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS). Located in Rehovat, Israel, WIS receives American tax dollars through NIH grants. The complaint follows the release of video footage and other evidence of abuse obtained during a recent undercover investigation of WIS by the Israeli group Let the Animals Live. PETA's complaint is based on the investigator's affidavit and the expert testimony of Dr. Tamar Ron, a primate specialist who has served as a consultant to the Israeli government and the United Nations.

In the experiments, holes are drilled into the skulls of cats and rhesus monkeys for the sole purpose of studying the effects of visual stimulation on brain activity--something that can be documented safely using non-invasive imaging. The cats are killed at the conclusion of the experiment; the monkeys are confined to cages for up to four years and some are killed. Some of the violations reported in the complaint include the following:

· Failure to minimize pain and distress in animals used in experiments
· Failure to provide primates with required environmental enrichment
· Failure to hire qualified and trained staff
· Use of excessive physical restraint on animals
· Depriving monkeys of adequate water

PETA is also asking the NIH to revoke grant money that was used by lead experimenter Amiram Grinvald during the undercover investigation and to bar him from receiving future NIH funding. Today, PETA sent DVDs of the undercover video footage to more than 300 American WIS donors, including BusinessWire founder Lorry Lokey, who recently donated $30 million to WIS.

"It appears that the Weizmann Institute has been using American taxpayer money to abuse cats and monkeys," says PETA Director of Research Kathy Guillermo. "We urge the NIH to investigate immediately and stop paying Weizmann to drill holes into animals' heads."

For more information and to view the video footage, please visit Peta.org.

Aware of other instances of corruption by the Weizmann Institute and its' administration? Send to MyRehovot your story, we'll make it public.

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Sunday, February 17, 2008

Weizmann Institute Doctorate Student Killed in India

A Rehovot Resident "was murdered this week in the Rajasthan province of India, Israel Radio reported on Friday.

Vadim Shpitalnik, 30, was studying for a doctorate at the Weizmann Institute Condensed Matter Department and traveled to India as part of his studies. After completing his academic work in India, he decided to tour the Rajasthan province, an area popular with Israeli backpackers.

India police suspect Shvitlanik was robbed and then killed by a blow to the head from a blunt object, Israel Radio reported.

In July, Israeli tourist Dror Shek, 23, was murdered in the Manali area of northern India by robbers who ambushed him on a remote village road."

Israeli citizen reportedly murdered by robbers in India. Haaretz.com (15 Feb 2008) [FullText]

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Monday, February 11, 2008

If you want to compete in the world, you have to start from the bottom," Rehovot nuclear physicist Harry Lipkin says

Israeli nuclear physicist set his sights on literacy

By Sharon Kanon

Octogenarian Israeli nuclear physicist Harry Lipkin is not your ordinary scientist. Sure, he can easily talk about neutrino oscillations, quarks, and mesons, but he's equally adept concerning his other passion - reading education.

The Weizmann Institute of Science professor emeritus gets to the core of the problem in education.

"Reading is the bottleneck," he told ISRAEL21c at his home in Rehovot before leaving for an annual multi-month stint at the Argonne National Research Labs in Chicago. "A child entering first grade with the ability to speak and understand, has in his brain an information processing system far superior to anything in Silicon Valley. But a child's learning to read can be compared to an astro-physicist looking for the keys to the cosmos. Both are trying to push the frontiers of their individual knowledge."

Lipkin's solution is a system of reading called LITAF, which was developed by Israeli educator Nira Altalef. The main feature of the system is the use of frequent simple diagnostic tests that enable the teacher to track a pupil's progress in real time. "If the pupil stumbles, a teacher immediately puts him or her back on track," says Lipkin who has become LITAF's biggest fan, and launched a second career for him.

Lipkin, a young 86, knows a thing or two about careers. With a degree in electronic engineering and additional courses in physics, he nailed down his first job - the super secret microwave lab at MIT.

"I was part of the team that developed the first microwave radar receiver used to detect and eliminate German submarines off the Atlantic Coast in WWII," Lipkin recalls.

As a graduate student Lipkin earned his PhD in nuclear physics at Princeton in 1946, rubbing shoulders with Niels Bohr and David Bohm, and observing how the master scientists tackled the enigmas of nuclear energy.

Exposed at Princeton to an agricultural training program run by Israeli kibbutz youth movement Hashomer Hatzair, Lipkin was attracted by the pioneer spirit, and in 1950 moved to Israel with his young wife Malka.

His professional expertise didn't remain a secret however, and he was recruited to consult on the planned Dimona nuclear reactor. He and two other scientists were sent to Paris to learn what a nuclear reactor was and how it works, a project which lasted until 1957.

Upon his return to Israel, he joined the Weizmann Institute and worked to build a graduate school of nuclear physics, and establish Quantum mechanics and nuclear physics as requirements. It was around this time that he started becoming interested in reading education.

"If you want to compete in the world, you have to start from the bottom. At the time, only a small percentage of Israeli high school students were continuing to higher education," he recalls. But it was decades later until he found a kindred spirit in Altalef, who in the 1980s was an advisor on special education for the upscale academically oriented Herzliya Gymnasium high school.

In the 1980s, Altalef was asked to evaluate the learning disabilities of children in the poor Hatikva neighborhood of Tel Aviv. The principals of two schools were desperate after years of failure. The breakdown of discipline, absenteeism, and vandalism were negative spin offs of lack of achievement.

She saw that the student's inability to achieve was not a matter of intelligence; they could not achieve because they did not know how to read.

The LITAF system, based on the principles of Piagt, uses 30-40 familiar words in a child's spoken language to start. To teach Arabic, 90 words are the core of the "memory support" method. The word "shalom" in Hebrew is the first.

In LITAF, the child learns how the word is broken down into syllables, and how syllables can be combined into other words. In a six-stage process, the child learns to identify all the consonants and vowels, and to build new words using them. The 7th stage is the development of fluent and accurate reading of new texts. At each stage the child gains a sense of achievement, the magic pill that reinforces his/her motivation to continue to take on new tasks.

"You don't have to be a super teacher," said Lipkin. Considering the fact that there are usually 40 heterogeneous pupils in a first-grade class in Israel, one would tend to think that the teacher has an impossible task. Not so. The class is divided up into groups of four or five, the teacher works with one group at the board at a time, and gives the others work pages or individualized tasks.

The flexible, structured curriculum includes a variety of interesting and challenging activities (e.g. using cubes with syllables and cutouts) so that each student is busy and advances at his own pace. This includes children with dyslexia. "Only 2% need a special class," says Lipkin.

More than 18,000 first grade children in 300 schools in Israel have learned to read with the LITAF method, prompting Lipkin to write an article for the journal Literacy Today in 2006.

He cites the glowing report of the Israel Venture Network (IVN) which funded the LITAF method in Tiberias for four years. "After only one year, over 93% of the first graders learned how to read compared with only 43% of first graders the previous year," he said

In a comprehensive study (2003-4), the Ministry of Education accorded LITAF "best practice" status, calling it the "most advanced program for teaching reading and writing." The study noted that 90% of second grade students read and understand fluently compared to 63% three years ago, with a significant increase in "good" and "excellent" grades.

"In science, it can take 20 years to see if a good idea really works," said Lipkin. "The LITAF program has been used successfully for more than 20 years."

He is exasperated that expansion was curtailed when the Ministry of Education decided to take away the budget for a trainer-mentor every other week. "There are always new fads. LITAF is systematic. It is not expensive. It teaches the student to work independently. If something is old and it works, it should be kept."

Source: Sharon Kanon. Israeli nuclear physicist set his sights on literacy. Israel 21C (12 feb 2008) [Fulltext]

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Saturday, January 19, 2008

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute President Zajfman Drops Support for Court Order Against Striking Profs

The President of the Weizmann Institute of Science, Prof. Daniel Zajfman, Thursday removed his signature from the university presidents' request for a court injunction against the striking senior lecturers.

Zajfman was the second university head to do so, following Tel Aviv University President Prof. Zvi Galil.

But while Galil said he was rescinding his support for the request submitted to the National Labor Court because it was unfair, Zajfman cited technical reasons.

According to the Weizmann Institute spokesman, Zajfman was party to the first part of the request, asking the court to force the faculty and the Finance Ministry into talks under the aegis of the court, but because Weizmann does not require its faculty members to teach, it has no reason to join the request for injunctions to force the strikers to return to the classrooms.

The court will deliberate on the injunction request Sunday, the deadline announced by the university presidents for salvaging the fall semester. The chairman of the Council of University Heads, Prof. Moshe Kaveh, has asked for the immediate intervention of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in order to solve the crisis.

Source: Tamara Traubmann, Haaretz Correspondent. Weizmann head drops support for court order against striking profs. Haaretz.com (11 January 2008) [FullText]

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Monday, January 14, 2008

Business Wire Founder Lorry I. Lokey Donates $30 Million to Rehovot Scientific Institution

Monumental Gift Supports Pre-Clinical Research Facility and Biochemistry Education, will hopefully not contribute to the raise of the financial and other type corruption at the major Rehovot scientific institution of higher learning

The American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science announced that Lorry I. Lokey of San Francisco pledged $30 million to further international scientific education and research.

The funds will be used by the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel for two major initiatives: the Lorry I. Lokey Pre-Clinical Research Facility and the Lorry I. Lokey Research School of Biochemical Sciences. The gift is the largest single contribution ever made to the American Committee in its 63-year history.

Lokey is the founder of Business Wire, a leading San Francisco-based news release distribution service. During a recent visit to the campus of the Weizmann Institute, he called the philanthropic gift "one of the best investments of my life."

As the only facility of its kind in Israel and in the region, the Pre-Clinical Research Facility will dramatically increase the resources of Weizmann Institute scientists, particularly in research areas with medical and health implications. When completed, it will be the largest core research facility on the Institute's campus.

The facility will be utilized by many of the Institute's 130 biological science research groups, and will house the campus's most advanced imaging equipment. Research conducted in the building will span the medical spectrum, including studies on cancer, genetic disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, bone and muscle
development, and immune system disorders.

Thanks to a dedicated suite of biohazard laboratories, scientists also will be able to research viruses and lower-grade infectious diseases, such as influenza and hepatitis.

The Weizmann Institute's biochemistry graduates already play leadership roles internationally and in Israel's academic and private sectors in biotechnology, hi-tech, security, pharmaceuticals, and other key drivers of the Israeli economy. The new Lorry I. Lokey Research School of Biochemical Sciences will be a centerpiece of the Institute's graduate education program. By boosting student benefits and the school's visibility, Lokey's endowment will make the school even more competitive, and help ensure that it will be among the top choices for talented graduate students worldwide in the life sciences.

Each new Ph.D. student in the Lokey Research School will be supported directly by an increased budget (supplementing the scholarship all Graduate School students currently receive, which covers the cost of tuition and a living stipend). Other new planned amenities include a prestigious annual colloquium which would bring top life scientists to the Weizmann Institute campus.

Professor Daniel Zajfman, President of the Weizmann Institute, said that Lokey's gift will have a profound effect on the future of science, Israel, and every graduate bearing the Lokey Research School name with pride.

"Lorry Lokey understands that the partnership between science and philanthropy has the potential to improve dramatically the quality of our lives and to reduce human suffering. We are so grateful for his visionary leadership and for the trust he places in the scientists and students of our Institute," he said.

Richard H. Jones, U.S. Ambassador to Israel, said that Lokey's gift "helps strengthen the ties between Israel and the U.S.," in addition to furthering science research that serves all of humanity without distinction.

As one of the nation's leading philanthropists, Lokey's many other charitable activities emphasize both science research and education, particularly in universities and high schools.

The American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science (ACWIS), founded in 1944, develops philanthropic support for the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, one of the world's premier scientific research institutions. The Weizmann Institute is a center of multidisciplinary scientific research and graduate study, addressing crucial problems in medicine and health, technology, energy, agriculture, and the environment. For additional information, please visit www.weizmann-usa.org.

Jeffrey Sussman, (1 212) 895-7951 jeffrey@acwis.org

Source: Reuters, Business Wire

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Friday, January 11, 2008

New York Protests Cruel Experiments at Rehovot's Weizmann Institute

US Animal Rights Nonprofit Organization Protests Cruel Experiments at Weizmann Institute

Experimenters at Israeli Lab Funded by U.S. Group Drill Holes in Primates', Cats' Skulls

Also see: "Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies"

New York - Waving signs that read, "Weizmann Institute: Stop Torturing Monkeys" and "Weizmann Institute: Stop Torturing Cats," PETA members will hold a demonstration outside the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science (ACWIS), which is responsible for raising funds for the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, where cruel experiments on cats and monkeys were recently exposed in an undercover investigation. In the experiments, holes are drilled into the skulls of cats and rhesus monkeys for the sole purpose of studying the effects of visual stimulation on brain activity--something that can be documented safely using magnetoencephalograms (MEGs) and microelectrode implants in human volunteers. The protesters will show undercover video footage of abuses taken inside the Weizmann Institute's laboratory by an investigator from the Israeli group Let the Animals Live:

Date: Tuesday, January 8
Time: 12 noon-1 p.m.
Place: Outside the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science, 633 Third Ave. (between 40th and 41st streets)

Let the Animals Live conducted its investigation in the fall of 2007 after a whistleblower contacted the group to report alleged violations of animal protection laws. The investigator documented experiments on monkeys and cats that involved drilling holes into the animals' skulls to expose their brains, immobilizing them in restraint chairs, and inserting electrodes directly into their brains. The animals are then forced to watch patterns on a computer screen for hours while their brains are photographed. The cats used in the experiments are killed immediately afterward, but the monkeys spend up to four years in the laboratory, isolated in barren cages. To make them cooperate, the monkeys are kept constantly hungry and thirsty so that they will "work" for a sip of water.

"We're sure that the generous people who donate to the Weizmann Institute have no idea that they're funding these gruesome experiments," says PETA Director of Research Kathy Guillermo. "We're calling on the ACWIS to stop supporting the mutilation of animals."

PETA will be filing a complaint with the National Institutes of Health alleging violations of animal protection laws and has sent letters to the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation and the Grodetsky family, all of which have reportedly contributed funds to the laboratory at the Weizmann Institute.

MR: Funding bodies deserve to know the other sad examples of the corruption at the Rehovot's Weizmann Institute of Science, including the financial criminalities by the corrupted administration (see "Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies").

For more information and to see the video, please visit PETA's Web site PETA.org.

Source: PETA Media Center (7 Jan 2008) [FullText]
Contact: Kathy Guillermo (1757) 622-7382

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Rehovot Gift of the week: Weizmann Institute Gets $30 Million Donation

Donation for an Israeli Institute

By Sally Beatty

WHO GAVE IT: Lorry Lokey, founder and former chief executive of Business Wire, a corporate-news distribution service.

HOW MUCH: $30 million

WHO GOT IT: The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

PURPOSE: Establishing the Lorry I. Lokey Pre-Clinical Research Facility and Lorry I. Lokey Research School of Biochemical Sciences.

HOW IT HAPPENED: When he was 12 years old, Mr. Lokey wrote a religious-school essay about Chaim Weizmann. A chemist whose work on explosives was valuable to the Allies in World War I, Weizmann and others pressed the British government after the war to establish a Jewish homeland in Palestine. "He could have asked for money or to be knighted," says Mr. Lokey. "I was impressed by the fact that he asked for something for a group of people and not for himself."

Weizmann led the institute as its first president (current research ranges from fighting disease and hunger to work in physics) and later became the first president of Israel.

The son of an air-conditioning and ventilation-systems salesman, Mr. Lokey, 80 years old, grew up in Portland, Ore. He founded Business Wire in 1961 with $2,000 in leased office space and equipment, and sold the business to Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway in 2006 for an amount estimated at over $400 million. Mr. Lokey says he gives to educational causes out of gratitude for the solid start he got in grammar school.

Fascinated by Israel, he had long planned to give the institute a major donation, in recognition of its reputation for scientific excellence. "But I just never got around to calling them. It's one of those things where you say, 'I'll do it tomorrow.' " Eventually, the Weizmann Institute approached Mr. Lokey in early 2005 and talks about the current gift began.

Source: Sally Beatty. Gift of the week: From a School Essay to $30 Million: Donation for an Israeli Institute. Wall Street Journal (4 January 2008) [FullText]

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Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Rehovot Hypnosis Study Reveals Brain's 'amnesia centers'

Brain scans of hypnotized people that are taken as they forget and are triggered to remember have revealed neural circuitry that is key to the memory suppression and recall process. The researchers who conducted the study said their insights into the memory suppression and recall process may yield insight into the mechanisms underlying amnesia.

Yadin Dudai and colleagues published their findings in the January 10, 2008, issue of the journal Neuron, published by Cell Press.

In their experiments, the researchers identified two groups of volunteers—those who were susceptible to hypnotic suggestions and those who were not. They showed both groups a documentary depicting a day in the life of a young woman. A week later, they placed them in a magnetic resonance imaging scanner and induced them into a hypnotic state. In this state, the scientists gave the subjects a posthypnotic suggestion to forget the movie, also giving them a reversibility cue that would restore the memory.

Once the subjects had been brought out of the hypnotic state, the researchers tested their recall of the movie, then gave them the reversibility cue and tested their recall again. As expected, the hypnosis-susceptible group showed reduced recall of the movie, compared with the hypnosis-nonsusceptible group.

Analysis of the brain scans taken during posthypnotic amnesia and memory recovery revealed distinctive activity differences between the hypnosis-susceptible group and -nonsusceptible group in specific occipital, temporal, and prefrontal areas of the brain. The researchers also detected telltale brain activity changes in the hypnosis-susceptible group as they forgot and recalled memory of the movie. In that group, activity in some brain regions was suppressed during memory suppression, while activity in other regions increased. And during reversal of the posthypnotic suggestion, the susceptible group showed recovery of activity in suppressed regions.

“The paralleled recovery of brain activity and memory performance strongly suggests that suppression was exerted at early stages of the retrieval process, thus preventing the activation of regions that are crucial for productive retrieval,” wrote the researchers. They wrote that their findings suggest that the amnesia induced by the posthypnotic suggestion “affects an executive preretrieval monitoring process, which produces an early decision on whether to proceed or not on retrieval, and in case of a [question about the movie], aborts the process.”

The researchers said that further studies will be needed to determine whether their findings apply to cases of functional amnesia seen in the clinic. However, they said that some forms of amnesia may be a consequence of the “preretrieval memory abort” mechanism their findings revealed. Thus, hypnosis may at least partially model such forms of amnesia, they said.

“All in all, our data identify brain circuits that subserve suppression of retrieval of long-term memory of a real-life-like extended episode in the course of posthypnotic FORGET suggestion,” they concluded. “Some of these regions are likely to play a role in normal retrieval. Others are likely to be engaged in dysfunctions that involve an executive decision to abort subsequent retrieval.”

Source: Cathleen Genova. Hypnosis study reveals brain's 'amnesia centers'. Press Release by Cell Press. EurekAlert (9 January 2008) [FullText]

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Tuesday, January 08, 2008

Rehovot's Yosef Yarden Became the Member of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities

Israeli basketball players are significantly smaller than their European counterparts, and so are their red mullets - the fish, that is. University of Haifa researchers, along with Italian colleagues discovered that red mullets off the coast of Israel are about five centimeters shorter than those in Italian waters. The adult male Israeli fish is an average of 146.3 millimeters long, while females are 176 millimeters. The Italians are 195 mm. (males) and 218 mm (females).

Prof. Ehud Spanier and Oren Sunin of the university's limnological institute say very young red mullets are longer, but this difference disappears with age; when fully grown Israeli red mullets are, on average, five centimeters shorter than Italian ones.

The reason, said the researchers, is nutrition. In the eastern end of the Mediterranean, there are sharp variations in the amount of food, while near Italy the supply is much more stable. When there isn't enough to eat, the mullets develop at a different pace. They have a growth spurt, and when they reach adolescence and can multiply, they compensate for the lack of food and grow more slowly. The young European fish, however, can take their time, reaching adolescence more slowly before producing offspring. Thus they are able to end up five cenimters longer than their Israeli cousins.

Mullets are a family (Mugilidae) of ray-finned fish found worldwide in coastal temperate and tropical waters, and in some species in fresh water also. Mullets have served as an important food source in Mediterranean Europe since Roman times. The family includes about 80 species.

It seems as if European fish, like European people, know how to enjoy the good life and good meals (and perhaps a sip of good wine at lunch?). But stressed Israeli life under constant pressure forces them to eat on the run.

THREE JOIN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Three scientists have joined the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, the government's official adviser on science matters. At a ceremony at the academy in Jerusalem, the three joined the other 93 current members and delivered lectures on their field of interest. Fifty-three of the academy members are in the natural sciences and the rest in social sciences and humanities.

The new ones, appointed in a general meeting of the academy after nomination by members in the two divisions, are Prof. Ya'acov (Gerald) Blidstein of the department of Jewish thought at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev; Prof. Chava Turniansky of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Yiddish department; and Prof. Yosef Yarden of the biological control department of the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot.

Blidstein, renowned worldwide for his work on halacha and aggada, is the author of six books and scores of articles. He has also done extensive research on Maimonides.

Turniansky, an emeritus professor, has studied the history of Yiddish culture during the pre-modern era, and received the Bialik Prize for Jewish Thought.

Yarden is a research leader in the biological roles of hormone-like molecules called growth factors and their involvement in cancer. He is dean of the Weizmann school for master's degree studies, and chairman of the National Biotechnology Council.

ABRAMSKY TO HEAD R&D COUNCIL

Prof. Oded Abramsky, a senior neurologist and researcher at Hadassah University Medical Center in Jerusalem's Ein Kerem, has been appointed chairman of the National Council for Civilian Research and Development by President Shimon Peres. The nomination has already been approved by the cabinet, as requested by Science, Culture and Sport Minister Ghaleb Majadlah, and by Israel Academy of Sciences president Prof. Menachem Ya'ari.

The national council, established in 2004, serves as the government's adviser for planning and organizing civilian R&D; recommends general national policy in this field to the government on an annual basis; recommends national priorities in civilian R&D; makes suggestions on infrastructure projects in science and technology; and advises the government and ministerial committee on science and technology and the forum of government chief scientists on matters connected to government R&D.

Abramsky, 67, headed Hadassah's neurology department for 17 years and also chaired Hadassah's Agnes Ginges Center for Human Neurogenetics. Among his many positions, he also served as dean of the Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Medicine, chief scientist of the Health Ministry and chairman of the board of governors of the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation. A retired colonel in the Israel Defense Forces, Abramsky served as assistant head of research and development for the IDF and the Defense Ministry. A prolific researcher and writer, he has published four books and over 300 articles. He is also is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of the United Kingdom, and a member of the Institute of Medicine of the American National Academy of Sciences.

CLIMATE CHANGING FASHION

You take an umbrella when rain is forecast. But actual change in climate will have a profound effect on clothes and fashion, changing styles, fabrics and laundering, according to a University of Maryland expert. "Remember Jimmy Carter's sweaters from the 1970s energy crisis? With Seventh Avenue proclaiming that 'green is the new black,' we can expect a surge in fashion innovations in response to climate change," says Jo Paoletti, an American studies professor at the University of Maryland, and an expert in apparel design and the history of textile and clothing.

"As the impact of global warming is felt, we can anticipate debates over cotton versus polyester, and increasing concern about the water and energy needed to launder clothing," adds Paoletti, who has spent over 25 years researching and writing about clothing in America. "In the future, smart clothing that monitors and adjusts to body temperature may help reduce our need for air conditioning and heating."

Climate change could also affect the frequency of buying new clothes, and the size of our wardrobes.

Source: Judy Siegel-Itzkovich. What our fish and our basketball players have in common. JPost.com (22 December 2007) [FullText]

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Thursday, January 03, 2008

Rehovot's Weizmann' Institute Corner Street Fight for Animal Rights Moves to the Knesset

Knesset backs animal rights, but doesn't roll out the red carpet

By Shahar Ilan

The doctrine of natural rights: "Out of an ethical recognition of the fact that animals undergo unlimited experiences ... suffering and pleasure, fear and joy ... I think we, as human beings and as a society, are obligated to act to defend their basic rights. These rights include, among other things, the right not to suffer from violence, from hunger or from thirst."

Thus reads the Declaration of Animal Rights, signed in the Knesset Tuesday by the initiative of Anonymous for Animal Rights, on Animal Rights Day.

In light of this, who said Labor MK Shelly Yachimovich can withstand pressure? She had not planned to be one of 30 MKs to sign the Declaration of Animal Rights (only 14 of whom actually did, led by MK Yoel Hasson of Kadima, who heads the Knesset's animal lobby).

It is no secret that human rights are more important to Yachimovich than animal rights. But her 12-year-old daughter Rama, a student at the Open School in Jaffa and a tireless collector of abandoned animals, won the battle. Rama's class was invited to the signing ceremony, and she successfully pressured her mother to sign the document. That's what you call intensive lobbying.

The animals, meanwhile, stayed outside. It was impossible to ignore that the Declaration of Animal Rights was signed without any animal representation.

When Hasson tried to bring in his family's dogs for a photo-op for the daily Maariv, he was told the cats that are sometimes photographed walking around the cafeteria were all the Knesset could handle.

Knesset policy is that seeing-eye dogs are allowed in, while other animals are not. But special requests will be considered on a case-by-case basis, said Knesset director general Avi Balashnikov. He said he did not receive any such requests.

The Knesset cafeteria marked a day without meat yesterday. When Yossi Beilin, the outgoing chairman of Meretz-Yahad, discovered he had to choose between lasagna and stuffed peppers, he suggested taking protest action.

Haim Oron, a candidate for taking over Beilin's position, also took it hard, but said he was prepared to suffer for one day. United Arab List-Ta'al chairman Ibrahim Sarsur became nostalgic about his childhood when the Friday meals were considered a celebration.

An interesting coalition in favor of animal experiments for the purpose of saving lives has developed between the scientists and the ultra-Orthodox. Balad chairman Jamal Zahalka, a pharmacist, said there is no way to develop painkillers without causing animals terrible pain.

Yehuda Avidan, a strategic consultant close to Shas, thinks the whole event is "hypocrisy of the first degree," saying that developing anticancer drugs justifies animal experiments. "The Weizmann Institute is doing sacred work," he said.

This week saw the continuation of a conflict between the ministerial committee for legislation, which refuses to discuss bills for special days in the Knesset that are dedicated to specific topics, and MKs who think the special days are a great opportunity to advance related legislation.

Hasson and MK Dov Khenin (Hadash) submitted a proposal to have animal rights' groups monitor the experiments.

MK Yuli Edelstein (Likud) proposed making it illegal to kill animals for inappropriate purposes.

A compromise was finally reached because Hasson is also acting coalition chairman: The laws were proposed in the Knesset plenum, but the vote will take place another time.

Source: Shahar Ilan. Knesset backs animal rights, but doesn't roll out the red carpet. Haaretz.com (3 January 2008) [FullText & TalkBack]

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Sunday, December 23, 2007

Patent-Infringement Windfall Goes to Israeli Institution, Could Be a Result of the Weizmann Top Scientists, Officials Gambling

Two companies involved in the making and selling of the anticancer drug Erbitux will each pay $60-million to the technology-transfer organization of Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science, resolving claims from a patent dispute.

The settlement, announced on Friday by ImClone Systems Inc. and Sanofi-Aventis SA, acknowledges that the Weizmann organization, called the Yeda Research and Development Company, is the sole owner of the patent.

In September 2006 a federal judge in New York ruled that three scientists at Weizmann deserved the patent for inventing the process used in making Erbitux, a drug for treating colon cancer that ImClone Systems makes.

ImClone has resolved another patent-infringement lawsuit over Erbitux involving a university. In September, it agreed to pay $65-million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Repligen Corporation to settle a 2004 lawsuit that was due to go to trial that day. The parties did not say how much of the settlement would go to MIT.

Source: Goldie Blumenstyk. Patent-Infringement Windfall Goes to Israeli Institution The Chronicle of the Higher Education (10 Dec 2007) [FullText]

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

Rehovot Weizmann Institute Says Vivisected Monkeys Rehabilitated. Would You Believe a Serial Lier?

Also see: Rehovot's Weizmann Institute is a Concentration Camp, Leading Israel News Source Says. My Rehovot (19 December 2007) [FullText]

Reuven Ladiansky, legal counsel for Let Animals Live, said the group intends to file a request with the Rishon Lezion Magistrates' Court to issue an injunction against the Weizmann Institute and the National Council on Animal Experimentation, in accordance with the Animal Protection Law.

Click here to see pictures and video on the vivisection of animals at the Weizmann Institute of Science (at Let Animals Live website) Warning: contains disturbing images!

"Our request relates to all the different aspects of the cruelty involved in these experiments," Ladiansky said, "the monkeys, which are social animals that need contact with their own species, are kept in small cages, and during the actual experiments they are placed in a device that does allow them to even move their heads."

The organization also plans to file a complaint with Rehovot Police, claiming that the Institute is conducting cruel experiments in violation of the Animal Protection Law, an offense punishable by up to three years in prison.

"We are hoping that indictments will be filed," Ladiansky said.

Let Animals Live said four Knesset members - Eitan Cabel (Labor), Yoel Hasson (Kadima), Gideon Sa'ar (Likud) and Dov Khenin (Hadash) - are backing the organization's initiative and have called for a special Knesset session on the matter, scheduled for Wednesday.

The Weizmann Institute of Science issued a statement saying that it "abides by all laws of the State of Israel as well as international codes of ethics (including the National Research Council) in all matters pertaining to animal experimentation and welfare. This includes minimization of suffering and an extremely high standard of animal maintenance and care. The Institute will terminate, quickly and unconditionally, any research that does not meet even one of these regulations.

"Animal experimentation is crucial to understanding various biological processes. Such understanding frequently leads to the development of medical applications (drugs and therapies) that save human lives and improve the quality of life for millions," the institute said in a statement," the Institute said.

According to the Weizmann Institute, the monkeys used in the research are rehabilitated and moved to a shelter in Ben Shemen."

Located in Rehovot major Israeli Science Institution is a well known plot of the curruption by Israel Science. My Rehovot took a leadership in enlightening the non ethical wrongdoing by the Weizmann Institute officials, that apparently serves ones private interest.

Despite the statement by the Weizmann that the Institution "abides by all laws of the State of Israel as well as international codes of ethics (including the National Research Council", the Institute did not terminate yet the employment of the currently acting Academic Secretary Boaz Avron, and Professor and Chairman Yoram Groner for their apparent professional misconduct.

Source: Dan Bentsur Ynet, Israel News. 19 December 2007, 14:40 [FullText]

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute is a Concentration Camp, Leading Israel News Source Says

'Treblinka for monkeys' slammed

Animal rights activists gather outside Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot to protest controversial brain experiments. 'Decent, broken-hearted people told me they wanted to infiltrate the institute and free the monkeys from this hell, even if it would lead to their arrest,' Let Animals Live spokeswoman says

"Free the monkeys" and "Monkeys feel the same pain humans do" were among the signs waved by some 250 animal rights activists who gathered outside the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot on Tuesday in protest of controversial experiments on animal brains.

The protest came following a week of public outcry after the release of shocking hidden-camera footage taken by a monkey caretaker who worked in the institute's labs.

Click here to see pictures and video on Let Animals Live website
(Warning: contains disturbing images)

"I received emails, faxes and phone calls from decent, broken-hearted people who said they wanted to infiltrate the institute and free the monkeys from this hell, even if it would lead to their arrest, but I told them that we must remain within the boundaries of the law," said Anat Refua, spokesperson for Let Animals Live, which organized the rally.

"Our side abides by the law; it is those inside these walls who are the criminals. We will get the monkeys out of there legally," she added.

Using a loudspeaker, Refua and former Channel 2 news anchor Gadi Sukenik called on the Institute to end the experimentations "that do not contribute anything to modern science", as passing cars honked in support, indicating widespread sympathy for the cause.

According to Refua, the entire cast of the popular satirical TV show "Eretz Nehederet (Great Country)", who are currently shooting new episodes, asked that the demonstration be postponed so that they could also attend.

Some of the protestors went as far as likening the animals' suffering to the Holocaust, and wore black t-shirts bearing the words "For the animals, it is an eternal Treblinka" – a quote by Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer in "The Letter Writer"...

Source: Dan Bentsur Ynet, Israel News. 19 December 2007, 14:40 [FullText]

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Saturday, December 01, 2007

Rehovot Scientists Sniff Out Genetics of Smell

Researchers from the Weizmann Institute have identified a gene associated with sensitivity to the odor of sweat, revealing one way in which varying olfactory acuity might be accounted for. Working with molecular genetics Professor Doron Lancet, research student Idan Menashe conducted an experiment in which a team of volunteers sniffed compounds imbued with the odor of banana, eucalyptus, spearmint and sweat. Noting the sensitivity with which the subjects perceived the scent, the researchers cross-referenced the results against genetic profiles relating to one gene known as OR11H7P. Their findings, published recently in the open-source journal PLoS, note a correlation between the presence of the gene, the number of times the gene is found, and a capacity for smelling isovaleric acid, which mimics the odor of sweat. The discovery will bolster the Institute's Human Olfactory Receptor Data Exploratorium project, which aims to supply an overview of the evolution, structure and function of the entire olfactory gene family.

Source: November 25 - December 1, 2007 News. Israel21c.org [FullText]

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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Portraying Weizmann Institute Top Official, Board of Governors Member: Yoram Groner - One Man, Two Faces

According to the "Board of Governors and Institute Officers of the Weizmann Institute of Science" page, the Chair of the Board of Governors is Mandy Moross, UK. Deputy Chairs are H. Thomas Beck, Canada, Lester Crown, U.S.A., Robert J. Drake, The Netherlands, Dame Vivien Duffield, Switzerland, Prof. Yoram Groner, Israel, and S. Donald Sussman, USA.

Thus, one of the Deputy Chairs is an Institutional Professor, Dr. Yoram Groner. Beyond his research described at the Molecular Genetics web page, he is also described as follows.

Quoting Administering the Institute: The Leadership Team page devoted to Professor Yoram Groner:

"Since Prof. Yoram Groner joined the Weizmann Institute in 1975, he has held a number of positions. He headed the Institute's Biological Services (1985-1988), the Virology Department, later renamed Molecular Genetics and Virology (1987-1992), and the Harry Levine Center of Applied Research (1988-1992). In 1993 he was appointed Institute Vice President, and later Deputy President. He also heads the Kekst Family Center for Medical Genetics, and has received numerous awards for his research into the genetic and molecular basis of such disorders as Down's syndrome and Alzheimer's. He is a member of the European Molecular Biology Organization Council and of the Israeli National Council for Research and Development. Prof. Groner holds the Dr. Barnet Berris Chair of Cancer Research."

Excellent man-in-science story, isn't it? Well. One would say so, congratulating Weizmann Institute for a great leader. "The most disgusted man, I ever knew", argues Dr. Groner peer from the Institute (*).

He is also known for accepting gift authorship; for writing recommendation letter (addressed to a Nobel Prize Laureate Prof. David Baltimore) to a fellow scientist (of Biological Chemistry Prof. David Wallach group) who he never worked with; for submission of essentially the same project and receiving funding for it from two separate funding authorities (two funded proposals on a strain of transgenic mice and Alzheimer's disease, by Israel Science Foundation, and Alzheimer's Association, Chicago, IL); and for unjust kicking his junior colleague out of Alzheimer's Association grant application opportunity, assisted by Boaz Avron, presently acting Weizmann's Head of Directorate for Research and Academic Affairs, and Academic Secretary... You read it right. "A c a d e m i c S e c r e t a r y". Not a "Secretary for Weizmann Institute Corruption". Not sure?

Well, we are not sure either about both of them (MyRehovot, "Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies", 4 Feb 2007) . But The Weizmann Institute stance is different. Dr. Groner is ethical enough to be Weizmann leader, Board of Governors member, Deputy Chair...

Who to believe? You decide...

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*) MyRehovot used here more polite characteristics of Professor Groner, then the one actually heard from his Weizmann Institute colleague.

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Weizmann's Annual Assembly of the Board of Governors Has No Authority to Down the Corruption at the Major Israeli Science Institution

video

Rehovot, Israel (3 November 2007) - "A Duet between Science and Music" concert welcomed today night distinguished friends of the Weizmann Institute of Science...



...gathered in Rehovot for the 59th Annual General Meeting of the Board of Governors . The Opening Gala included preceding the concert cocktail dinner and the welcoming remarks by Professor Daniel Zajfman.

video

Event participants came to the Wix auditorium by taxis



...and bus using organized transportation from Tel Aviv hotels...

video

...while the Institute major entrance remained closed for visitors (including those who purchased an annual Institutuional Gardens pass)



...and had apparently limited traffic.



Weizmann Annual Assembly of Governors and their accompanying persons will stay at Weizmann campus for four days, through Wednesday, November 7, and will attend a number of scheduled events, as presented in the Meeting programme.



According to the programme, the first "members only" event of the Governors forum 2007 was "Appointments and Promotions Committee" gathering at the 4th Floor Ayala Conference Room, Stone Administration Building (Friday, 2 November 2007, 10:30AM). Academically speaking, this is the most mistyfying event, a non studied thus far decision making substance, that could well yield the appointment for WIS Professorship far from being outstanding former students or friends of the present top ranking institutional professors, and a discrimination of Women-scientists.

Sadly, the Programme of the Weizmann governing body does not address any corruption issue or academic ethics breach at the major Israeli Science Institute, or any hot international Science policy issues (such as Open Access to scholar/science literature, widely advocated for at Israeli arena by an independent Israel Scholar, based in Rehovot non-profit educational organization). Recent related publications by MyRehovot and others are listed below and provided at length of My Rehovot "Weizmann Institute" collection .

Weizmann Institute Breaks Its Own Rules To Preserve High Web Rating

Danial Zajfman of Rehovot's Weizmann Institute: New President or a Major Puppet?

Weizmann's Former President Trades Silence on the Corruption at Rehovot's Institute: New President to Be a Puppet in Hands of Corrupted Administration?

Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies

Rehovot's Shame: Weizmann Institute Corruption Begins at the Stone Administration Building

Rehovot Wants Weizmann Institute to Pay Local Taxes

MyRehovot Reader Responds to "Weizmann Institute Threatens Employee With a Dismissal for Bearing Magen David Patch"

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Has Become A Luxury Housing Constructor

US National Academy of Sciences Member Rehovot's Michael Sela Says Weizmann Scientists Have Bad Ethics

Does Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Professor Lie in The Major Science Publication, PNAS USA?

Weizmann Institute Fools students and staff (in Russian, get robotic translation)

Police to question heads of Weizmann Institute about embezzlement affair (also available in Russian)

Rehovot's Cancer Scientist and Weizmann Institute Graduate School Dean Yosef Yarden Joins Israel Biotech Firm as Scientific Advisory Board Member

Visiting Scientist Affairs or Rehovot Bed Saga: Weizmann Wonder Wander

Note: This material is original content by MyRehovot.info. Its' universal usage permission is granted only in case the first place of publication - that is www.myrehovot.info - is duly identified and presented as a hyperlink. To request original photos and video files or links, please write us an email.

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Friday, November 02, 2007

Weizmann Institute to held 59th Annual General Meeting of the Board of Governors

The schedule for the 59th Annual General Meeting of the Board of Governors (to held in Rehovot November 2-8, 2007) is publicly available (Acrobat .pdf imprint, as a result of a Google search with an appropriate key words) and presented below:

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2007

10:30 a.m. Appointments and Promotions Committee (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Ayala Conference Room

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2007

6:45 p.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute
7:15 p.m. Transportation from all guest houses on campus to the Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium
7:30 p.m. A Duet between Science and Music - Concert welcoming the members of the Board of Governors including Cocktail Dinner preceding the concert

Welcoming Remarks: Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President Science: Prof. Yadin Dudai, Head, Department of Neurobiology Music: The Israel Camerata
Conductor: Prof. Avner Biron Location: Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium, on campus

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2007

7:15 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute
8:30 a.m. Governance Reform Committee (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Ayala Conference Room
8:30 a.m. Audit Committee (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Small Meeting Room

8:45 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute for Executive Council members, mission participants and accompanying persons
9:40 a.m. Arrival at the Weizmann Institute of Science for accompanying persons
Barbara & Morris Levinson Visitors Center and visit at the Jubilee Walk
(light refreshments will be served)
9:45 a.m. Transportation from all guest houses on campus to the Stone Building
10:00 a.m. Executive Council Meeting (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, Mezzanine, Zacks Hall

10:15 a.m. Welcome and General Overview of the Weizmann Institute of Science for accompanying persons, followed by a scientific presentation
11:30 a.m. - Driven tour of campus for accompanying persons, followed by a visit to the Weizmann
12:25 p.m. House - the formal residence of the first President of the state of Israel and the founder of the Weizmann Institute
11:30 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute

12:30 p.m. Luncheon at which the Sir Charles Clore Prize will be awarded to Dr. Nir Friedman, Department of Immunology, and the Sir Charles Clore Postdoctoral Fellowships will be presented by Dame Vivien Duffield, DBE. Keynote Speaker: Prof. Jehuda Reinharz, President, Brandeis University, honorary Ph.D.
recipient for 2007 Topic: "Chaim Weizmann: Statesman Without a State (on the 90th Anniversary of the Balfour Declaration) Location: Edith and Abraham Wix Central Library, on Campus

3:10 p.m. Dedication of new inscriptions recognizing major gifts - Including coffee and dessert Location: International Plaza

3:30 p.m. Nominating Committee (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Ayala Conference Room
(# For those who would like to rest or freshen up before the next event, day rooms are available at the Laub Youth Village. Keys can be picked up at the Youth Village entrance. Transportation will be available after each event. Please request to be taken to the Laub Youth Village. A lounge offering refreshments, newspapers and internet services will be available at the Barbara and Morris Levinson Visitor's Center Lobby

3:45 p.m. Alternative Energy Research Initiative Board (members only) Location: Perlman Institute of Chemical Sciences, 4th Floor, Room 402
5:00 p.m. Dedication of Kimmel Plaza Location: Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Building entrance
5:45 p.m. Presentation of the Helen and Martin Kimmel Award for Innovative Investigation to Prof. Naama Barkai, Department of Molecular Genetics Remarks: Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President. Including a scientific presentation by the recipient of the award. Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium

6:30 p.m. Festive Dinner honoring Helen and Martin Kimmel. Greetings: Prof. Ada Yonath Location: Tent adjacent to the Ebner Auditorium, on campus
(* Transportation to all destinations available after dinner from the Ebner parking lot)

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2007

8:15 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute for Board Members
9:15 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute for mission participants and accompanying persons

9:30 a.m. Board of Governors Session I
Closed Session (members only) Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
9:55 a.m. Transportation from all guest houses on campus to the Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
10:00 a.m. Coffee Break
10:15 a.m. Board of Governors Session II

Open Session of the 59th Annual General Meeting
Chair's Report: Mandy Moross, President's Report: Prof. Daniel Zajfman, Report of the Co-Chairs of the Scientific and Academic Advisory Committee: Prof. Sir Alan R. Fersht, FRS and Prof. Hans A. Weidenmuller Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium

11:30 a.m. Coffee Break

12:00 noon
Open Session
Special Session: Women in Science

Participants:
Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President
Prof. Hadassa Degani, President's Advisor for Advancing Women in Science
Dr. Maxine Singer, Board Member, President Emerita, Senior Scientific Advisor, CASE
Carnegie Institution of Washington
Keynote Speaker: Nobel Laureate, Prof. Christiane Nusslein-Volhard, Honorary Ph.D.
recipient for 2007. Followed by the Presentation of the Sara Lee Schupf Postdoctoral Awards funded by the Clore Foundation and S. Donald Sussman Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium

1:15 p.m. Luncheon Welcoming New Board Members Greetings: Mandy Moross, Chair of the Board of Governors Location: Tent adjacent to the Ebner Auditorium, on campus
2:00 p.m. W-GEM Audit Committee Location: Stone Administration Building, 4
th floor, Ayala Conference Room
2:30 p.m. Visit to the Clore Garden of Science - an outdoor, hands-on science museum (for the accompanying persons)
2:45 p.m. Investment Committee (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Small Meeting Room
3:00 p.m. Dedication of the Rose and Leon Mitchell Laboratory for Cancer Research Location: Arnold R. Meyer Institute of Biological Sciences
3:45 p.m. Dedication of the Laboratory in honor of Sarah & Rolando Uziel
Location: Max and Lillian Candiotty Building

(# For those who would like to rest or freshen up before the next event, day rooms are available at the Laub Youth Village. Keys can be picked up at the Youth Village entrance. Transportation will be available after each event. Please request to be taken to the Laub Youth Village. A lounge offering refreshments, newspapers and internet services will be available at the Barbara and Morris Levinson Visitor’s Center Lobby.)

4:40 p.m. Transportation from the Laub Youth Village and all guest houses on campus to the Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium
5:00 p.m. Ceremony for the Conferment of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy honoris causa

Recipients:
Arie Lova Eliav - Israel
Prof. Avram Hershko - Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
Prof. Eric R. Kandel, M.D. - Columbia University, USA
Prof. Christiane Nusslein-Volhard - Max Planck Institute, Germany
Prof. Jehuda Reinharz - President, Brandeis University, USA

Keynote Speaker: Arie Lova Eliav. event cont'd.. Topic: "Endowed with Understanding and Discerning Knowledge". Followed by reception. Location: Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium

(* Transportation to dinner available after the ceremony in front of the Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium)

7:00 p.m. Dinner honoring the 2007 Recipients of Doctor of Philosophy honoris causa Degrees and Members of the Board of Governors (by invitation)

Hosted by Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President, and Mrs. Joelle Zajfman
Location: Tent adjacent to the Ebner Auditorium, on campus

(* Transportation to all destinations available after dinner from the Ebner parking lot)

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2007

7:45 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute
8:45 a.m. Transportation from all guest houses on campus to the Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
9:00 a.m. Board of Governors - Session III (members only) Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
10:15 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute for mission participants and accompanying persons
11:00 a.m. Transportation from all guest houses on campus to the Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium

11:30 a.m. New Initiatives in the Life Sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science:
Special Session in honor of Lorry I. Lokey, USA recognizing his dedication to advance the New Initiative in the Life Sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science
Keynote Speaker: Prof. Eric R. Kandel, 2000 Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine,
Honorary Ph.D. Recipient for 2007 Location: Michael and Anna Wix Auditorium

1:00 p.m. Luncheon in honor of Mr. Lorry I. Lokey, USA, marking the establishment of the Lorry I. Lokey Research School of Biochemical Sciences. Speaker: Prof. Ephraim Katzir, fourth President of the State of Israel Location: Edith and Abraham Wix Central Library, on campus
3:15 p.m. Dedication of the Mary and Tom Beck - Canadian Center for Alternative Energy Research Location: Perlman Building Plaza, on campus
3:45 p.m. W-GEM Oversight Board (members only) Location: Stone Administration Building, 4th Floor, Ayala Conference Room
3:45 p.m. Transportation to Tel Aviv hotels
5:00 p.m. Transportation for W-GEM Oversight Board members available upon request from the Stone Building parking lot

Afternoon - Evening: At Leisure

7:00 p.m. Canadian delegation dinner (by invitation) - all Canadian guests welcome
Location: 49th Floor of the Azrieli Towers, Tel Aviv

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2007

7:45 a.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the Institute for Board members, mission participants and accompanying persons
9:00 a.m. Board of Governors - Session VI: Graduate Studies at the Weizmann Institute of Science Introductory Remarks: Prof. Israel Bar-Joseph, Vice President for Resource Development and Public Affairs Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
9:30 a.m. Launching of the Ph.D. for MDs program in honor of Michael Jacobs, UK Participants: Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President Keynote speaker: to be determined Niv Pencovic, Ph.D. Student, Department of Molecular Genetics (TBC) Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
9:45 a.m. Personalized Medicine: Tailor-made treatments and designer drugs Is there a drug matchmaker in your future?

Participants:
Prof. Eytan Domany, Department of Physics of Complex Systems
Prof. Doron Lancet, Department of Molecular Genetics
Prof. Zvi Livneh, Head, Department of Biological Chemistry
Dr. Ohad Birk, Head, Genetic Institute, Soroka University Medical Center and Alumni of the Weizmann Institute of Science
Location: Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium

10:45 a.m. Coffee Break
11:10 a.m. What makes Chapagne bubble? The Economic Value of the Blue Energy...
Weizmann Institute students present "Science in Three Minutes" Led by: Prof. Varda Rotter, Head, Department of Molecular Cell Biology. Location: Dolfi and Lola Auditorium
12:15 p.m. Dedication of the Nissim Foundation for Life Science Research Location: Arnold R. Meyer Institute entrance

1:00 p.m. Luncheon in honor of Joseph and Jeanne Nissim Location: Tent adjacent to the Ebner Auditorium, on campus
3:00 p.m. Transportation to Tel Aviv hotels
5:45 p.m. Transportation from the Weizmann Institute (from all guest houses on campus) to the David Intercontinental Hotel, Tel Aviv

6:30 p.m. Transportation from Tel Aviv hotels to the David Intercontinental Hotel
(Those who are departing for the airport directly from dinner should bring their luggage along with them on the bus)
7:00 p.m. Gala Dinner concluding the 59th Annual General Meeting of the Board of Governors Location: David Intercontinental Hotel, Tel Aviv. Transportation to all destinations, including the Ben-Gurion Airport, available after dinner
from the David Intercontinental Hotel entrance

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2007

Board of Governors – Session V: Follow the Sun: a one-day excursion to the Negev
Meet the special people who cultivate zionistic dreams on the "Peace Border". Hear from Lova Eliav and the young Israelis who volunteer at the Nitzana Youth Aliyah Village he founded, where history, science, and education are brought together. For dessert, enjoy some well-deserved relaxation in the desert.

Accompanying Persons: In addition to the special activities arranged for you on November 4 and 5, you are warmly invited to take part in the events of the Board of Governors as indicated in this program.

(Updated October 19, 2007)

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

Women-Scientists Discriminated by the Weizmann Institute of Science

Universities repeatedly claim to fly the banner of sexual equality. But in practice and despite the implementation of a series of measures in recent years, the percentage of women with senior status on the faculties of most universities remains little changed. In some places it has decreased.

Until a decade ago, there was almost no discussion on the low rate of women's participation in Israeli academics. But top officials in the system began to recognize the problem and have taken steps in the last six years to fix it.

Despite these efforts, statistics obtained by Haaretz reveal that women still represent only about a quarter of Israel's academic faculty: 26 percent in 2006 compared with 23 percent in 2000. Female professors say the glass ceiling remains in place because only superficial, easy-to-handle issues have been addressed, not advancement mechanisms and acceptance procedures.

"There has been no lack of doctoral degrees for years, and there is no lack of women who excel. What remains lacking is a desire to incorporate them in the faculty," says Professor Rachel Elior, adviser to the president of the Hebrew University on the status of women.

Elior bases this on data that indicate that since 2004 the representation rate of women among incoming faculty at the Hebrew University has decreased by about 42 percent. The situation at the Weizmann Institute of Science is similar. There, not a single woman was accepted to the basic academic faculty from 2003 until 2006, after years in which only one to two new female scientists were accepted each year.

"When these statistics were first published, people were very surprised to learn that in another few years there will be no female professors at the Institute," says Professor Hadassa Degani, adviser to the president of the Institute on the advancement of women in science.

This year, four of 12 incoming members of the Weizmann faculty are women, but according to Degani, "this year may be coincidental."

The situations at Ben-Gurion University and Tel Aviv University are similar: The rate of incoming female faculty has stagnated at 30 percent. Only at the University of Haifa has the rate reached more than 50 percent.

During the past year, women represented 65 percent of that university's incoming faculty. But that rate will drop to 48 percent in the coming academic year. Only Bar-Ilan University enjoys a constantly increasing trend. The rate of female researchers to begin their work during the coming academic year is 39 percent.

After many years of denial, universities have adopted measures to solve the problem. Many universities like Bar-Ilan have opened breast-feeding stations, and some have established day care centers. Advisers on women's issues to university presidents have been appointed.

Hebrew University adopted a declaration that calls for gender equality. Ben-Gurion University made a landmark decision two years ago to appoint Professor Rivka Carmi as the first female head of an Israeli university.

The Hebrew University and the Weizmann Institute decided to provide grants to assist women in traveling abroad with their families to do post-doctoral work. Degani and Elior both describe the post-doc as a bigger obstacle for women because it is considered unacceptable for Israeli men to compromise their careers by following their female scientist partners abroad.

Professor Hannah Naveh, dean of the Faculty of the Arts at Tel Aviv University, says that measures like establishing breast-feeding stations or providing grants to outstanding female candidates are vital and should have been implemented long ago, though they are a kind of lip service.

Naveh says there is a need to appreciate the sociocultural reality in which women consistently have a lower status than men.

"People have internalized the need to correct the structural problem in academics," Elior says. "But this fails when put to the test of reality."

She says that appointment committees comprised of faculty members who decide who will be hired and promoted are a big reason for this problem. The deliberations of these committees take place behind closed doors and provide no way to evaluate their decisions. "It is always possible to say that 'he was accepted because he was better than she was,'" Elior says.

Source: Tamara Traubmann. The academic year begins / Doctoral degrees abound, but number of women academics stagnates. Haaretz.com (18 October 2007) [FullText]

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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Rehovot Academic Community Wage: Up to NIS 25,000 a Month

For days, 4,500 university teachers have been on strike for better employment terms. They claim to be underpaid and complain of a brain drain. But as happens in the public sector, the first line on their payslip has little to do with their actual pay. Some valuable benefits are omitted.

Here are the figures. Some 4,500 academic staff work at 7 universities: Tel Aviv, Bar-Ilan, Ben-Gurion, Haifa, Hebrew universities, the Weizmann Institute and the Technion. These are divided into four groups: 900 lecturers gross an average of NIS 14,000, 1,300 senior lecturers average NIS 16,000 (gross), 1,000 associate professors earn about NIS 19,000 and 1,300 full professors make a monthly salary of more than NIS 25,000. Since each rank contains elements of seniority which translate into more pay, the wages of two lecturers of the same rank may vary.

On paper, with average wages of senior academic staff earning an average of about NIS 20,000, the data is not encouraging. Although the average salary in Israel is nearly NIS 8,000, academic staff members are highly-educated (at least PhDs), and can be expected to earn more. Nevertheless, based on the average in Israel, this group is in the eighth-highest-earning bracket.

These average wages are only part of the package. Senior lecturers are entitled to just under two months' sabbatical with full pay every year, so that the annual salaries are paid for 10 months of work, raising the average to NIS 24,000. Also, senior lecturers have tenure. Among academic staff, only non-senior lecturers are not entitled to tenure.

But the jewel in the crown is the work hours. It turns out that a lecturer in Israel is in classroom for an average of just 6 hours per week (3 lectures). The rest of their time is supposed to be invested in research. This time is not monitored, and each lecturer is in fact a free agent - a hard working, motivated one will conduct many studies and publish many papers, compared to one who may chose to work at an easier pace. No one actually knows what a lecturer does in the time spent outside the classroom.

And herein also lies one of the problems: an industrious lecturer and one who is not as hard-working are paid in the same manner, so it's no wonder that industrious and talented lecturers leave the country.

Also, the university pays for overseas travel and participation in conferences. A lecturer is entitled to the amount of $3,500, a senior lecturer to $4,500, an associate professor gets $6,000 and a full professor receives more than $8,000 annually. This money is meant, as noted, to be used for overseas travel and participation in academic conferences.

Source: Tal Levy. University wage: Up to NIS 25,000 a month. Haaretz.com (25 October 2007) [FullText]

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Will Prostate Cancer Experimental Therapy by Weizmann Scientists, Rehovot Biotech Firm Cure Prime Minister

Researchers based at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot have played a central role in developing a new light-sensitive drug that can lead to the complete destruction of the blood vessels connected to the prostate tumor, and thus the destruction of the tumor.

Prostate cancer hits one man out of six, with a five-year survival rate of 99% - compared to 40% or less 20 years ago. Early detection is critical, but the new drug is designed to treat even tumors discovered after they have begun to develop.

Israel21c reports that the new drug, named Tookad, is based on chlorophyll, which has a high absorption of light. Used in previously-existing photodynamic therapy (PDT), Tookad is significantly more effective than other drugs used in the past, which are based on hemoglobin pigment.

Effective Against Large Tumors

Tookad absorbs near-infra-red light, which penetrates more deeply and efficiently than other wavelengths. Using Tookad, Israel21c reports, "a single illuminated optical fiber can reach and eradicate a tumor with a diameter of up to 4 centimeters, and even larger growths can be treated by using several fibers. What this means is that the Israeli-developed drug is effective against large, solid tumors which previously had evaded the reach of other PDT drugs."

Another benefit of Tookad is that it can be flushed out of the body within two hours, reducing the need for patients to avoid sunlight for lengthy periods following treatment.

Professor Avigdor Scherz of the Weizmann Institute's Plant Sciences Department and Professor Yoram Salomon of the Biological Regulation Department invented the new photo-sensitive drug. [It is licensed to Steba Biotech, Rehovot-based Biotech Firm.

"We have proof that this treatment causes the destruction of the part of the prostate which contains the cancer," said McGill University Hospital urologist Dr. Mostafa Elhilali, who took part in trials of the new drug. The trials found that 46% of patients showed no evidence of prostate cancer after treatment with Tookad.

Source: Hillel Fendel. Prostate Treatment Advancing, Thanks to Israeli Research. IsraelNN.com (29 October 2007) [FullText]

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Sunday, October 21, 2007

Big Orange Plantation, Ahuzot Hanassi, Weizmann Institute Under Wildfire Attack Threat

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

10 Minutes of the Cell Phone Air time Can Kill you, Rehovot's Weizmann Scientists Study Imply

"Just 10 minutes of chat on a cellular phone is enough to trigger a chemical reaction in the brain that can increase the risk of cancer, warn scientists from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. A study by researchers at the Rehovot institute shows that even low levels of radiation from handsets can lead cells to divide, an occurrence linked to the growth of tumors and several types of cancer. The debate over cellphone safety has been raging for years. Previous studies have found no conclusive evidence linking brain tumors or a rise in cancer rates to mobile use. It was thought phones emit too little radiation to heat the brain dangerously. The new study, published in the Biochemical Journal and reported by New Scientist, suggests, however, that low-intensity 'non-thermal' radiation can also pose a risk to health. In lab tests the Israeli researchers exposed human and rat cell cultures to low-level electromagnetic radiation at 875 megahertz, a similar frequency to that used in mobile phones. After only 10 minutes of exposure, the researchers discovered activation of an enzyme that regulates cell differentiation and division, even though the radiation was weaker than emissions from a typical handset. The researchers concluded that the chemical trigger for the enzyme is the release of reactive oxygen species, small molecules which damage DNA in cell membranes."

Source: 10 minutes on the cell phone could damage your health, say Israeli researchers. israel21c.org (2 September 2007) [FullText]

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Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Are Rehovot, Weizmann Institute International Centers of Children Pornography?

Thanks to Rehovot municipality permissiveness and apparently no reaction by Mayor Office on earlier publications by My Rehovot and GalGefen, City of Rehovot continuously provides an exposure of children to pornographic pictures.

My Rehovot was first to wrote about it about two years ago (Rehovot as a Center of Pornography for Children and Adults, 23 May 2005). Since then nothing changed, however. Except the fact The City of Rehovot can now claim international recognition for "Children Pornography", as indicated by My Rehovot usage statistics. This is because every month a number of My Rehovot visitors come to our electronic pages as a result of search engine search for "children pornography" and other related key words (see picture below). They now all know "this is where Rehovot is lacking in responsibility".


With this in mind could the time be appropriate to run in Rehovot an International Childern Pornography Film Festival? Perhaps, simultaneously with Woman Film Festival to begin tomorrow at the Weizmann's Wix Concert Hall, and, perhaphs, in close co-operation with the Weizmann Institute which is also known for electronic distribution of pornography titles (Weizmann Institute Breaks Its Own Rules To Preserve High Web Rating, 26 March 2007)? One may find such an idea is well appropriate for municipality leaders, who took no actions on unlimited exposure of Rehovot minors to pornography at Rehovot streets!

...Meanwhile Haartez recently reported (Eran Gabay. Knesset to mull censorship bill for Internet porn, violence, 10 July 2007) that... "Internet censorship in Israel will start in about a year. The law, proposed by Amnon Cohen of Shas and unanimously approved on Sunday by the Ministerial Committee on Legislation, will now be brought to the Knesset floor.

Senior officials in the Communications Ministry forecast that it will take seven to ten months to prepare for implementing the provisions once the law passes.

The proposed law would require Internet Service Providers (ISP) to only allow access to Internet sites featuring pornography, gambling and violence to those over 18 who specifically sign up for such access and identify themselves as adults.

The cost of implementing the bill is estimated at about NIS 10 million, based on figures provided by networking giant Cisco to the ministry at its request, TheMarker has learned.

The ISPs are committed to providing Internet packages at the same price, regardless of whether customers have access to pornographic sites or not. The companies will also not be allowed to pass on the costs directly to the consumer.

The proposed law is intended to protect children from viewing violent and pornographic content on the Internet. Access will only be granted if a customer specifically requests it, and identifies himself as an adult - with a valid means of identification. Otherwise, filtering will be the default option for all packages.

The new law would apply also to content on cellular phones.

The bill will now go to the Knesset Economics Committee to be prepared for its first reading.

A number of requirements in Cohen's original bill have been dropped, among them biometric identification such as by fingerprints. Also, violation of the new bill would not be considered a criminal offense, though it will carry a heavy fine.

The filtering can take place at the ISP or on the customer's own computer.

The interesting question is who will decide what is pornographic or violent enough to be censored and, moreover, where to draw the line between soft and hard core pornography.

The law states that the rules will be set by a committee composed of representatives of the education, justice and communications ministries, as well as representatives from the National Council for the Child.

The rules will match European standards, which are based on a similar move in Australia.

The Communications Ministry has vehemently denied that Atias will broaden the criteria for filtering because he is ultra-Orthodox. The ministry said that Atias, as every minister who comes after him, will have no influence on the committee's decisions over what content to ban.

The ministry is preparing for a barrage of criticism over freedom of speech and privacy infringements. Officials are aware that such steps have been taken in only a few countries, most of which Israel is not interested in being mentioned with in the same breath. They are also aware that it is impossible to effectively block 100 percent of pornography, violence, pedophilia, Nazism or other problematic Internet content.

At the Communications Ministry's request, criminal responsibility was removed from the law. What remains is fines for ISPs who violate the law.

As to the question of the size of the fines, the ministry is bandying around low figures in order not to harm the industry. Figures in the NIS 300,000 range seem likely for each violation. This is much less than the sanctions placed on cellular companies for not blocking pornographic content, where fines have been in the millions.

The requirement to identify yourself is not considered to be a problem of privacy, according to the ministry. They emphasize that the ministry will not collect any lists or information about subscribers who take the open packages, and such information will only exist at the ISPs. Even today, in theory, the ISPs could identify and keep track of who views what, the ministry explains.

Atias knows that he will be in direct conflict over the law with liberal organizations, which will raise issues of basic rights.

However, Atias is firm in his conviction of the importance of the law. The ministry sees it necessary to strike a balance between freedom of expression and privacy, and between the need to limit access of minors to harmful content."

Quoting Wikipedia article on "Pornography by region":

"In Israel, which is often seen as a Western country in the Middle East, pornographic films began to be produced in the 1990s, However most of the films were shot in the 2000s . Israeli pornography may be considered nascent but has gone a way since its beginnings. Today, the biggest pornography company is SexStyle that produces films for the Israeli public. In 2003, the first pornographic film featuring Arab performers, produced by this company, caused a public uproar among Israeli Arab community."

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Monday, September 03, 2007

Rehovot Scientists Reignite Mobile Phone Cancer Fears

Cellphone-cancer link generates headlines in under 10 minutes, thanks to Rehovot scientists!

"New research claims that cells can react to a GSM-like signal in as little as ten minutes - though if whether this could causes cancer remains open to interpretation.

Those who believe that mobile phones do cause cancer, and/or a wide variety of other ailments, suffer from two problems: the fact that long-term studies have shown no causal link, and the fact that there is no known mechanism for phones to affect cells. This study would seem to address the latter issue.

Researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot exposed cells to signals at 875MHz (close to one of GSM's frequencies), the signal was very low-level in order to avoid heating the cells, which is known to have effects. The researchers then report (in Biochemical Journal) that the cells exhibited changes in their "ERK Pathways".

This doesn't mean the cells are cancerous. Indeed Simon Arthur, at the University of Dundee, is unimpressed; as reported by New Scientist:

"Transient and reversible activation such as this is unlikely to [cause cancer] ... transient activation of ERK1/2 occurs frequently in response to a huge variety of signals and is an essential component of many aspects of cellular physiology".

So what we have established is that it is possible for cells react to radio waves, but that their reaction is a long way from cancer. There also remains the first problem, that of long-term empirical studies, before we can point the accusing finger at our mobiles and relight our fags."

Source: Bill Ray. Cells 'react' to GSM signals claims research. Register.co.uk (30 August 2007) [FullText]

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Sunday, September 02, 2007

Rehovot Researchers Discover Survival Mechanism for Blood Cancer Cells

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia is a type of blood cancer in which specific white blood cells, called B lymphocytes or B cells, build up in the blood, bone marrow and lymph nodes.

The lifespan of a normal B cell is limited by an internal self-destruct program but, in cancer cells, this mechanism breaks down. B cells that don't self-destruct can live on to multiply and accumulate in dangerous amounts.

A team of scientists headed by Professor Idit Shachar of the Weizmann Institute's Immunology Department and Dr. Michal Haran of the Hematology Institute of the Kaplan Medical Center recently discovered what makes these cancer cells stay alive.

They then launched a targeted attack on the survival mechanism they discovered and succeeded to significantly raise cancer cell mortality rates. Their findings may lead to future treatments for this disease, as well as for other diseases in which B lymphocytes accumulate in the blood.

In previous research, Shachar had found that a specific receptor — a protein on the outer surface of healthy B cells — fulfills a crucial role in helping these cells to survive. She wondered if the same protein might also be a central player in the abnormally high survival rates of cancerous B cells.

Members of Shachar's research team, including Inbal Binsky, Diana Starlets, Yael Gore and Frida Lantner, together with Kaplan Medical Center doctors Haran, Lev Shvidel, Professor Alan Berrebi and Nurit Harpaz, scientists from Yale University and David Goldenberg of the Garden State Cancer Center in New Jersey, examined B cells taken from chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients.

They discovered that, even in the earliest stages of the disease, these cells have an unusually high level of both the survival receptor and another protein that binds to the receptor.

The scientists found that this protein, in binding to the receptor, initiates a series of events within the cell that leads to enhanced cell survival capabilities. For instance, in one of these events, a substance is produced that helps to regulate the cells' lifespan. This substance causes another protein to be produced, which then prevents the self-destruct program from being activated. The team treated the chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells with an antibody that attached to the survival receptor, blocking its activity and causing the cancer cell death rate to soar.

The antibodies they used are produced by the firm Immunomedics, in New Jersey, and are currently entering clinical trials for the treatment of several different types of cancer. Following this research, which has revealed the mechanism for the antibody's actions, the company is planning trials for chronic lymphocytic leukemia, as well.

Shachar said, "The abnormally elevated levels of this receptor seem to be important factors in the development of this disease, right from the beginning, and they are responsible for the longevity of these cancerous B cells. Blocking the receptor or other stages in the pathway they activate might be a winning tactic, in the future, in the war against cancers involving B cells."

Source: Weizmann discovers survival mechanism for blood cancer cells. www.Sun-Sentinel.com (30 August 2007) [FullText]

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

US-Canadian Fund Looks to Rehovot's Cancer Researchers for Answers

"At first it was founded to stem the scientific 'brain drain' from Israel, but the Israel Cancer Research Fund (ICRF) now says it is looking to Israeli scientists for a prescription to stop cancer deaths. They recently moved a step closer.

A team of researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, led by ICRF-supported scientist Professor Yosef Yarden, [who also serves as Scientific Advisory Board Member of Rehovot's Biotech Firm GammaCan International, Inc.] has identified a specific protein that enables breast cancer cells to metastasize and spread to other organs.

The team hopes that the discovery will facilitate the development of drugs that block or inhibit the production of this protein to prevent metastasis in breast and other cancers. Metastasis, when cancer cells break away from the original tumor and spread via the blood stream to other organs, is the leading cause of cancer death.

According to the National Breast Cancer Coalition (NBCC), breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for women worldwide. NBCC estimates that some 3.3 million women in the United States are living with breast cancer: about 2.3 million who have been diagnosed and an estimated 1 million who do not yet know they have the disease. The NBCC estimates that about 2,030 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in men in the United States in 2007.

The work by the team at the Weizmann Institute was published recently online in Nature Cell Biology. It identifies "tensins," a family of proteins that stabilizes the cell structure, as a controlling mechanism for the spread of breast cancer. The scientists discovered a link between a specific tensin and a substance called growth factor which signals cells to spread.

The team examined the effects of drugs that block the effect of the growth factor. In patients who received the drugs, the harmful tensin proteins disappeared from the cancer cells.

"The mechanism we identified is clinically important. It can predict the development of metastasis and possibly how the cancer will respond to treatment," Yarden, of the Weizmann Institute's Biological Regulation Department, said in a statement.

The team, which was composed of researchers from Israel, the United States and Portugal, also included ICRF-funded scientist Professor Gideon Rechavi of the Sheba Medical Center.

"Each of us would like to play a role in bringing an end to the cancer crisis," Yashar Hirshaut, ICRF International Chairman, told ISRAEL21c. "ICRF scientists are providing the crucial ideas that are going to lead to the next generation of drugs."

The ICRF, which provided Rechavi a grant in 2006, was founded in 1975 by a group of American and Canadian researchers, determined to harness Israel's educational and scientific resources in the fight against cancer.

It's the single largest source of private funds for cancer research in Israel and has awarded 1,578 grants valued at more than $33 million to scientists at all of Israel's leading institutions.

ICRF chairman Hirshaut, an oncologist and associate professor at Weill-Cornell Medical College - New York Hospital in New York, said that ICRF is dedicated to supporting Israeli scientists in their mission to eradicate cancer.
Scientists who have made strides in that direction include the first two Israelis to win Nobel prizes in the sciences - Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko - for helping to understand how the human body gives the "kiss of death" to faulty proteins to defend itself from diseases like cancer.

Additional ICRF-supported scientists recognized for their achievements include Yair Reisner and his team which developed a novel bone marrow transplant technique for leukemia patients; Moshe Orens whose early research discovered the location and revealed the chemical nature of the common protein p53, a tumor suppressor that prevents tumor growth; Alberto Gabizon and his team which developed Doxil, an FDA-approved drug used in the treatment of breast and ovarian cancer, as well as Kaposi Sarcoma; Eli Canaani and his team which identified the molecular structure of the "Philadelphia Chromosome," the first abnormal chromosome found in leukemia. The "Philadelphia Chromosome" research led to the development of Gleevec, a drug that directly targets cancer cells and is now being used to treat chronic myelogenous leukemia.

Hirshaut added that through these discoveries the ICRF is "creating the base for an international pharmaceutical industry coming to Israel."

"We have insisted on preventing the brain drain, and have developed the scientific leadership in Israel and some outstanding people," Hirshaut said. "It is sophisticated and exciting work, which the world is waiting for. Israel has the people that can do this work."

In addition to the raw talent in Israel, Hirshaut said from a financial perspective, research dollars went further in Israel. He said the ICRF monies are used solely to provide the "everyday running materials" that permit the scientists, most of whom already are employed by universities, to conduct their research.

"The ICRF provides a vehicle to make important, substantial contributions to the solution of the cancer problem in sums that can be dealt with by many people," Hirshaut said.

On September 5th, the ICRF will hold its Annual Scientific Awards Evening at which time it will announce its 2007-2008 grants."

Source: Ahron Shapiro and Aimee Rhodes. US-Canadian fund looks to Israeli cancer researchers for answers: The work of Israeli cancer researchers is enhanced by the efforts of the ICRF. Israel21c.org (26 August 2007) [FullText].

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Saturday, August 18, 2007

Rehovot Scientists Finds a Drug to Erase Memories in Rats

"In the comedic sci­ence-fic­tion film “Men in Black,” a top-se­cret team uses a “mem­ory eraser” to make peo­ple for­get they’ve seen aliens. Mem­o­ry eras­ure is a re­cur­rent theme in sci­ence fic­tion, but un­til re­cently it has stayed in that realm on­ly.

That’s chang­ing. For the first time, re­search­ers say they have erased spe­cif­ic mem­o­ries in rats weeks af­ter the me­mor­ies were formed.

The find­ing comes on the heels of an­oth­er study a year ago in which sci­en­tists erased one-day old mem­o­ries of spa­tial in­forma­t­ion from rats. But it was un­known then wheth­er that could work for more es­tab­lished or com­plex mem­o­ries, the sci­en­tists said; now it’s be­com­ing ap­par­ent that it can.

The find­ings can serve to ben­e­fit peo­ple, such as for treat­ments to en­hance mem­o­ry or erase trau­mat­ic rec­ol­lec­tions, the re­search­ers added. But some au­thors have al­so pre­dicted po­ten­tial for abuse of such treat­ments. For in­stance, one might blot out a mem­o­ry to keep some­one from test­i­fy­ing about a crime. “Only the inherent good­ness of our fel­low men and wo­men” can pre­vent abuse, wrote one of the sci­ent­ists, Todd Sack­tor of SUNY Down­state Med­i­cal Cen­ter in Brook­lyn, N.Y., in an email.

Sacktor is part of a team—along with Yadin Du­dai of the Weiz­mann In­sti­tute of Sci­ence in Re­hovot, Is­ra­el—of researchers stu­dying what hap­pens in our brains when we learn and re­mem­ber. Mem­o­ries aren’t recorded as a sta­ble phys­i­cal change, like writ­ing an in­scrip­tion on a clay tab­let, they have found. Rath­er, long-term mem­o­ry stor­age is a dy­nam­ic pro­cess, in­volv­ing a min­ia­ture mo­lec­u­lar ma­chine that must run con­stantly to keep mem­o­ries alive. Jam­ming the ma­chine briefly can erase long-term mem­o­ries, they say.

In their new stu­dy, to ap­pear in the Aug. 17 is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Sci­ence, they trained rats to avoid cer­tain tastes. They then in­jected in­to the taste cor­tex—a brain ar­ea linked to taste mem­o­ry—a drug that would block the ac­tions of a par­ti­cu­lar mol­e­cule. They hy­poth­e­sized, based on ear­li­er re­search, that this mol­e­cule is a min­ia­ture mem­o­ry “ma­chine” that keeps mem­o­ry up and run­ning.

The mol­e­cule is an en­zyme called PKMzeta. An en­zyme is a pro­tein mol­e­cule that causes changes in oth­er pro­teins. PKMzeta lies in synaps­es, con­tact points be­tween nerve cells where they pass mes­sages to each oth­er in the brain. The en­zyme causes the struc­ture of these con­tacts points to change sub­tly.

But the mol­e­cule must be per­sist­ently ac­tive to main­tain this change, re­searchers found. Learn­ing brings about this ac­ti­vity. Si­lenc­ing PKMzeta re­verses the change: re­gard­less of the taste the rats were trained to avoid, they for­got their learn­ed aver­sion af­ter one in­ject­ion of the drug.

The tech­nique worked as suc­cess­fully a month af­ter the mem­o­ries were formed, equiv­a­lent to years for a hu­man, the re­search­ers said. All signs so far in­di­cate that the un­pleas­ant mem­o­ries were gone, they added. “This drug is a mo­lec­u­lar ver­sion of jam­ming the opera­t­ion of the ma­chine,” said Du­dai. “When the ma­chine stops, the mem­o­ries stop.”

In a pre­vi­ous study in the Aug. 25, 2006 Sci­ence, a group in­clud­ing Sack­tor found that a si­m­i­lar treat­ment could erase one-day-old mem­o­ries of spa­tial in­forma­t­ion in rats. But this work, re­search­ers said, shed lit­tle light on PKMzeta ac­ti­vity in the neo­cor­tex, the brain re­gion con­sid­ered re­spon­si­ble for per­ma­nently stor­ing most long-term mem­o­ries. These in­clude mem­o­ries re­quired for higher-level cog­ni­tive func­tions, such as lan­guage and com­plex thought. The new work fo­cused on that ar­ea of the brain.

Yiv­sam Az­gad, a spokes­man for the Weiz­mann In­sti­tute, wrote in an e­mail that he thinks abuse of the find­ings can be pre­vent­ed only through “eth­ics, and by the laws of each coun­try.” As with all re­search, he added, it’s sci­en­tists’ job to gain new knowl­edge, and so­ci­ety’s to use it re­spon­si­bly."

My Rehovot previously disclosed ("Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies", 4 February 2007) that Yadin Du­dai was included (without his knowledge) in grants by other less successful Weizmann Scientists. No doubts this academic misconduct (aiming to improve poor ranking of corresponding grant applications) could be assisted and directed by the corrupted Institutional academic office, headed by Mr. Boaz Avron.

Source: Drug found to erase memories in rats. World Science (16 August 2007) [FullText]

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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Daniel E. Koshland Jr. - Noted Biochemist, Editor, Friend of Rehovot's Weizmann Institute

Remembering Professor Koshland

"Daniel E. Koshland Jr., an eminent biochemist who redesigned biology instruction at UC Berkeley and influenced national science policy and publishing as a longtime editor of Science magazine, died Monday after a stroke.

Professor Koshland, a resident of Lafayette, was 87. He died at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Walnut Creek, UC Berkeley announced Tuesday.

"He was one of the outstanding biochemists of the last 50 years, and he was also a lot of fun to be around," said his friend Joseph L. Goldstein, a Nobel laureate and professor of molecular genetics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

Professor Koshland's father and namesake was a New York banker who moved West after joining Levi Strauss & Co. in 1922. The senior Koshland became vice president, president and chairman during a 57-year executive career with the San Francisco clothing company.

His son discovered at a young age that "his fascination for math, physics and chemistry exceeded his interest in jeans," Goldstein noted in a 1998 speech, when he presented Professor Koshland a Lasker Special Achievement Award in Medical Science.

He was best known among researchers for his seminal work on enzymes and their flexible interactions with their substrates, a process known as the induced-fit theory of enzyme dynamics, akin to a hand fitting into a glove as distinct from the older paradigm of rigid keys in locks.

That discovery led to a long line of research on enzymes and enzyme engineering, as well as other adaptive systems in biology, such as the role of surface receptors and regulatory proteins in bacteria.

UC Berkeley's Koshland Hall for biological research is named for him. His legacy also can be seen in the university's interdisciplinary emphasis on teaching and research in biology. He led a campus reorganization during the 1980s, spurred by the advent of genetic engineering and protein studies, that brought 11 widely scattered departments within three academic domains.

His national reputation grew during a decade at the helm of Science, one of the world's top research journals, from 1985 to 1995. He brought many innovations, including popular special editions, a streamlined system of reviewing manuscripts and expanded news coverage. Much of the current staff was hired during his tenure.

"The magazine we have today is very much the one he created in his term as editor," said Donald Kennedy, the former president of Stanford University and the journal's current editor-in-chief.

He maintained an active research lab at Cal, and published nearly 100 peer-reviewed papers, in addition to 200 editorials, while he held the Science editorship part-time. His last research paper will be published as part of a special tribute being planned by the journal, Kennedy said.

Professor Koshland was an important philanthropic supporter of science education and campus expansions at UC Berkeley and also at Haverford College in Pennsylvania, which was attended by two sons, James Koshland of Atherton and Douglas Koshland of Baltimore.

He endowed the Marian Koshland Science Museum at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., which is named for his late first wife, an immunologist who also was a prominent member of the UC Berkeley faculty.

He donated $8 million to the Weizmann Institute of Science to finance postdoctoral scholarships at the institute's Rehovot, Israel, campus. He also served many years as a senior scientific adviser.

"He had passion for science and for giving opportunities to young scientists," said Diane Portnoff,
the Weizmann Institute's executive director for major gifts.
Along with his scientific eminence, Professor Koshland was a first-class wit. He styled some of his editorials as a dialogue between the journal and a "Dr. Noitall," who began each piece by claiming the introduction was "a vast understatement of my true worth."

He took on such issues as science and political campaigns and "get-rich-quick science," and once suggested scientists could gain more charisma by wearing lab coats of other colors besides white.

He received many awards, which besides the Lasker included the top academic awards from UC Berkeley as well as a National Medal of Science in 1990.

He graduated from UC Berkeley in 1941 with a degree in chemistry, after which he joined the Manhattan Project, working with Glenn Seaborg in Chicago and at Oak Ridge, Tenn., to isolate and purify the plutonium used for the first atomic bombs. He earned his doctorate at the University of Chicago, where he also met his first wife.

The couple worked together at the Brookhaven National Laboratory until 1965 when he was recruited by Cal. The question of whether to move was a controversial one in the Koshland family.

"At our family dinner table we had a brief discussion in which our five children and my wife voted 'nay' on moving, and I quoted Lincoln to say the 'ayes' have it," Professor Koshland recalled in an autobiographical sketch for the Annual Review of Biochemistry in 1996.

Following the death of his wife after 52 years of marriage, Professor Koshland married Yvonne Cyr San Jule, whom he had first met in 1940 when they were undergraduates, and who survives him.

Other survivors include his two sons; daughters Ellen Koshland of Melbourne, Australia; Phyllis (Phlyp) Koshland of Paris; and Gail Koshland of Tucson; sisters Francis K. Geballe of Woodside and Phyllis K. Friedman of Hillsborough; nine grandchildren and one great-granddaughter; three stepchildren, 12 step-grandchildren and 17 step-great-grandchildren.

A memorial service is planned for the fall.

Donations in Professor Koshland's memory can be made to the Marian Koshland Science Museum, 500 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, D.C., 20001, or to the UC Berkeley Foundation to support bioscience and energy teaching and research. Write to the UC Berkeley Foundation, Attention: Vice Chancellor-University Relations, 2080 Addison Street, #4200, Berkeley, CA 94720-4200.

Source: Carl T. Hall, Chronicle Science Writer. Daniel E. Koshland Jr. - noted biochemist, editor. SFGate.com (25 July, 2007) [FullText]

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

Human Brain Needs Cholesterol, Rehovot Scientists Say

Weizmann Institute Scientists reveal a mechanism for healthy nerve development, which may lead to new treatments for neurodegenerative diseases

In a host of neurological diseases, including multiple sclerosis (MS) and several neuropathies, the protective covering surrounding the nerves – an insulating material called myelin composed of cholesterol – is damaged. Scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science have now discovered an important new line of communication between nervous system cells that is crucial to the development of myelinated nerves – a discovery that may aid in restoring the normal function of the affected nerve fibers.

Nerve cells (neurons) have long, thin extensions called axons that can reach up to a meter and or more in length. Often, these extensions are covered by myelin, which is formed by a group of specialized cells called glia. Glial cells revolve around the axon, laying down the myelin sheath in segments, leaving small nodes of exposed nerve in between. More than just protection for the delicate axons, the myelin covering allows nerve signals to jump instantaneously between nodes, making the transfer of these signals quick and efficient. When myelin is missing or damaged, the nerve signals can’t skip properly down the axons, leading to abnormal function of the affected nerve and often to its degeneration.

In research published recently in Nature Neuroscience, Weizmann Institute scientists Prof. Elior Peles, graduate student Ivo Spiegel and their colleagues in the Molecular Cell Biology Department and in the United States, have now provided a vital insight into the mechanism by which glial cells recognize and myelinate axons.

How do the glial cells and the axon coordinate this process? The Weizmann Institute team found a pair of proteins that pass messages from axons to glial cells. These proteins, called Necl1 and Necl4, belong to a larger family of cell adhesion molecules, so called because they sit on the outer membranes of cells and help them to stick together. Peles and his team discovered that even when removed from their cells, Necl1, normally found on the axon surface, and Necl4, which is found on the glial cell membrane, adhere tightly together. When these molecules are in their natural places, they not only create physical contact between axon and glial cell, but also serve to transfer signals to the cell interior, initiating changes needed to undertake myelination.

The scientists found that production of Necl4 in the glial cells rises when they come into close contact with an unmyelinated axon, and as the process of myelination begins. They observed that if Necl4 is absent in the glial cells, or if they blocked the attachment of Necl4 to Necl1, the axons that were contacted by glial cells did not myelinate. In the same time period, myelin wrapping was already well under way around most of the axons in the control group.

“What we’ve discovered is a completely new means of communication between these nervous system cells,” says Peles. “The drugs now used to treat MS and other degenerative diseases in which myelin is affected, can only slow the disease, but not stop or cure it. Today, we can’t reverse the nerve damage caused by these disorders. But if we can understand the mechanisms that control the process of wrapping the axons by their protective sheath, we might be able to recreate that process in patients.”

Several years ago, then a Weizmann affiliate Alexei Koudinov, MD, PhD, and colleagues in a series of articles (published in the FASEB Journal, Science, Neurology (also available for free), and other leading journals) and major meeting reports (inluding Press Book articles of the Society for Neuroscience USA annual meetings 2003, 2002, 2001 & 2000) showed that cholesterol, a building block of myelin, is essential for normal brain function, nerve cells plasticity, and neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, Down syndrome, neuromuscular pathology, and others. Contrary to a leading science journals, Dr. Koudinov research was not found to be a priority by Weizmann Institute narrow minded academic leadership, so, he could not endeavor his important research as the Weizmann Institute member. Dr. Koudinov presently serves as Editor-in-Chief of the major subject journal Neurobiology of Lipids, where forty other world leaders of the field serve as editors.

Weizmann Institute news releases are posted on the World Wide Web . For additional info contact Yivsam Azgad Tel: (9728) 934-3856/2 , Email: Yivsam.azgad@weizmann.ac.il or news@weizmann.ac.il

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Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Weizmann Institute Scientists Develop A General "Control Switch" for Protein Activity

The method may be used in biomedical research, and in the future in gene therapy and in genetic engineering of plants

Our bodies could not maintain their existence without thousands of proteins performing myriad vital tasks within cells. Since malfunctioning proteins can cause disease, the study of protein structure and function can lead to the development of drugs and treatments for numerous disorders. For example, the discovery of insulin’s role in diabetes paved the way for the development of a treatment based on insulin injections. Yet, despite enormous research efforts led by scientists worldwide, the cellular function of numerous proteins is still unknown. To reveal this function, scientists perform various genetic manipulations to increase or, conversely, decrease the production of a certain protein, but existing manipulations of this sort are complicated and do not fully meet the researchers’ needs.

Prof. Moti Liscovitch and graduate student Oran Erster of the Weizmann Institute’s Biological Regulation Department, together with Dr. Miri Eisenstein of Chemical Research Support, have recently developed a unique “switch” that can control the activity of any protein, raising it several-fold, or stopping it almost completely. The method provides researchers with a simple and effective tool for exploring the function of unknown proteins, and in the future the new technique may find many additional uses.

The “switch” has a genetic component and a chemical component: using genetic engineering, the scientists insert a short segment of amino acids into the amino acid sequence making up the protein. This segment is capable of binding strongly and selectively to a particular chemical drug, which affects the activity level of the engineered protein – increasing or reducing it. When the drug is no longer applied, or when it is removed from the system, the protein returns to its natural activity level.

As reported recently in the journal Nature Methods, the first stage of the method consists of preparing a set of genetically engineered proteins (called a “library” in scientific language) with the amino acid segment inserted in different places. In the second stage, the engineered proteins are screened to identify the ones that respond to the drug in a desired manner. The researchers have discovered that in some of the engineered proteins, the drug increased the activity level, while in others this activity was reduced. Says Prof. Liscovitch: “We were surprised by the effectiveness of the method – it turns out that a small set of engineered proteins is needed to find the ones that respond to the drug. With their greater resources, biotechnology companies will be able to create much larger sets of engineered proteins in order to find one that best meets their needs.”

The method developed by the Weizmann Institute scientists is ready for immediate use, both in basic biomedical research and in the pharmaceutical industry, in the search for proteins that can serve as targets for new drugs. Beyond offering a potent tool that can be applied to any protein, the method has an important advantage compared with other techniques: It allows the total and precise control over the activity of an engineered protein. Such activity can be brought to a desired level or returned to its natural level, at specific locations in the body and at specific times – all this by giving exact and well-timed doses of the same simple drug.

In addition, the method could be used one day in gene therapy. It may be possible to replace damaged proteins that cause severe diseases with genetically engineered proteins, and to control these proteins’ activity levels in a precise manner – by giving appropriate doses of the drug. Another potential future application is in agricultural genetic engineering. The method might make it possible, for example, to create genetically engineered plants in which the precise timing of fruit ripening would be controlled using a substance that increases the activity of proteins responsible for ripening. Moreover, numerous proteins are used in industrial processes, as biological sensors and in other applications. The possibility of controlling these applications – strengthening or slowing the rate of protein activity in an immediate and reversible manner – can be of great value.

Source: Weizmann Institute news release (19 June 2007) [FullText]

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Friday, May 25, 2007

Rehovot Student Leaders Vow to Converge on Capital, Start Hunger Strike

The unions have organized three large car and bus caravans that will leave Tel Aviv, Haifa and Beersheba at 3 p.m. headed for the prime minister's residence in Jerusalem's Rehavia neighborhood. The convoys will gather at 5 p.m. at the Shoresh Junction, and continue to the entrance to the city, where students will disembark and complete the trip on foot.

In addition, a group of some 40 students of veterinary medicine from Hebrew University's Faculty of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences in Rehovot [situated next to the Weizmann Institute of Science] launched a march from Beit Dagan to Jerusalem Wednesday, which is also expected to end on Thursday afternoon in front of the prime minister's residence...

Source: Haviv Rettig. Student leaders vow to converge on capital, start hunger strike JPost.com (10 May 2007) [FullText]

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Sunday, May 06, 2007

Three Students Detained in Clashes with police in Rehovot Weizmann and Hebrew University area

[While] Gov't acts to end student strike, three detained in clashes with police in Rehovot. "If we agree to this," the official said, "an absurd situation would occur - a new student would pay a different, higher tuition fee than a student already enrolled, whose fee would stay the same. This is something we totally object to as higher education must be equal and made accessible to all."

Source: Camilla M. Butchins. Gov't acts to end student strike. Three detained in clashes with police in Rehovot. JPost.com (1 MAy 2007) [FullText]

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Monday, April 30, 2007

USSR Aliyah is Over, Japanese is About to begin. A primer by the Weizmann Institute Scientist

"Yona can’t hide the fact that he’s a ger – even if he wants to. Well, there’s his last name and there’s the fact that he’s Japanese and walks around with a black velvet kippah on his jet- black hair − a bit of an anomaly. While most gerim have the convenience of being able to blend into society and only reveal their roots if they choose to, someone Japanese can’t.

The soft-spoken and refined 38-year-old experimental particle physicist converted two years ago in Canada. Having completed his Bachelor’s degree at Tohoku University in Sendai, Japan, he went to the United States where he did his Master’s degree in Nuclear Engineering at the University of California at Berkley and his PhD in Nuclear Engineering at the University of Michigan, Anne Arbor. After a two-year research stint in Canada, eight months ago he made aliyah with his ginger cat Sean who, according to Yona, is “just about bar mitzvah age.” Today he lives in Rehovot and works for the Weizmann Institute of Science.

Raised secular in Japan, Yona knew nothing at all about Jews or Judaism. While at Berkley, he started working once a week for a disabled religious Jew as an aide. “He took me to his synagogue and I started praying,” says Yona. “Then I started exploring and I started reading. At this time I wasn’t too interested in converting. I was more interested in the ethnicity of the Jewish people than theology, because religious Jews are a small percentage of the Jewish people.”

The decision to convert came 10 years later when he was meeting other Jews. “I never thought I’d convert. After I became a professional, I got more serious about life and started observing the laws, Shabbat and the holidays. And then slowly it started making sense and became logical to officially incorporate them into my daily life, consciously or unconsciously. Overall, there was a driving force moving me toward that direction.” Two years after his application to the Beit Din, he took the name of the man who first introduced him to Judaism.

Yona has no problems with his family accepting his decision because they don’t really understand it. Not philosophically, they just don’t have a deep understanding of Judaism. “I explained to them what it is but we haven’t discussed these issues in a serious manner. They don’t understand. We aren’t a religious family anyway, so there’s no family conflict. When I’m in Japan, I spend some time with my family, and on Shabbat with Jewish friends. There is a Sephardic synagogue in the port city of Kobe near Osaka, congregated mainly by Israelis living in the area.

“Judaism is more approachable for somebody who came from the East. It’s much easier to absorb and digest than say, Christianity, the ideas of which feel quite foreign and distant to me. Although Japan is a country that values discipline, the discipline dictated by Halachah is difficult. Gerim are like orphans. You have to live with this loneliness because once you become Jewish, you don’t really have any theological commonality with your parents. They’re still your parents but there aren’t a lot of things you can do with your own family members. This is really the toughest part. Of course you will find an adoptive family or host family who will take you in but still, you feel like an orphan.”

Although Yona feels accepted by his congregation and community, he doesn’t feel accepted by Israeli society. “It’s hard to blend in. The culture is so strong that if you’re from the outside you feel like an outsider.” This is especially so if you look like an outsider and act like an insider. Yona has long-range plans to remain in Israel but it is an experiment, of course, which he hopes will succeed.

“I hope I will have a happy life and get married and have children and stay healthy. I made such an effort to make aliyah. I hope to meet some Israeli woman, but I feel I shouldn’t be too limiting. I should be open to suggestions. But it’s a really limiting area. Here again, it’s not easy to marry − especially someone religious who would be willing and open to marrying a ger.

“Secular or even traditional people get nervous about the fact that I became a Jew. They cannot feel comfortable because it’s illogical, not something that should have happened. They give me the impression that I did something really chutzpadik. It makes them feel awkward about their own identity, and it makes them nervous when someone without hidden motives becomes Jewish.”

What Yona enjoys most about the religion he’s embraced is the continuing education. “You can never learn enough Torah, and you have to keep motivating yourself. Every time you learn, you discover something new. It really is like science, it’s a lifelong activity.” Spoken like a true professor.

For Yona, everything’s new – his religion, his country. He visited Israel four times before making aliyah but it’s a new experience, one he seems to enjoy, despite the hardships. “If you’re really serious about Judaism,” he says, “please come to Israel to live.”

Source: Rosally Saltsman. Journeys To Judaism: Gerei Tzedek. The Jewish Press (25 April 2007) [FullText]

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Weizmann Institute Breaks Its Own Rules To Preserve High Web Rating

As a matter of policy, Weizmann Institute deletes internet services, email accounts and associated web pages of the Feinberg Graduate School graduates shortly after they move to work at other places. Contrary to this established and well observed rule, very basic page on Rehovot, created by Olga Maleva & Yuri Bazlov, and hosted under Mr.Bazlov Weizmann's web resources was not deleted.

As Dr.Bazlov Curriculum Vitae states, he currently holds his second postdoctoral appointment at the University of Warwick. His CV also suggests that he left Weizmann Institute in the Fall 2003, to take his first postdoctoral term at the University of London.

The apparent reason of the preservation of Bazlov page on Rehovot, is Weizmann willingness to maintain top 10 placement of the Institute at Google and other search engines, where Bazlov page shows up.

There is nothing bad about it, right? Well. Yet, Weizmann web popularity could be even higher, should the adminstration learn about and preserve for future, the use of Weizmann computers for local (or even International?) sales of pornography video titles. Suprised to know about this factoid? Then follow this link to learn more about the corruption at the Weizmann Institute.

Note: This material is original content by MyRehovot.info. Its' universal usage permission is granted only in case the first place of publication - that is www.myrehovot.info - is duly identified and presented as a hyperlink

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Thursday, February 15, 2007

Danial Zajfman of Rehovot's Weizmann Institute: New President or a Major Puppet?

Daniel Zajfman had a simple motivation when he enrolled in physics in 1979 at the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology: a desire to understand nature. He has followed that ambition throughout an accomplished career.

In December, Zajfman became the tenth president of Israel's Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot. He lauds the frequent interactions between theoretical and experimental physics at the institute — one of its trademarks. Now he hopes to encourage interactions among other fields as well, such as biology and biochemistry. Zajfman says he would consider regrouping researchers into interdisciplinary departments.

Born in Belgium in 1959, Zajfman moved to Israel at the age of 20. In 1989 he received his PhD in atomic physics from the Technion, then spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. When he returned to Israel in 1991, he joined Weizmann's department of particle physics as a senior scientist.

Zajfman also has strong ties with Germany. Since 2001 he has been an external member of the Max Planck Institute of Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, where he was appointed a director in 2005. He found that science was an excellent means of overcoming political tensions among Israelis and Germans. "The diplomatic story between Israel and Germany started with scientists," he says.

The Weizmann Institute has no problem recruiting graduate students, says Zajfman, although political instability has made it more difficult to attract foreign postdocs. He believes there is a widespread misconception about life in Israel. "Some people think it's a third-world country," he says. The political situation does, however, make life more complicated. "You organize an international conference with 200 scientists in Eilat," says Zajfman, "then a bomb explodes in Jerusalem, which is 300 kilometres away, and the whole conference is cancelled."

Zajfman will face other challenges, says Andreas Wolf of the Max Planck Institute of Nuclear Physics. "He undertakes the task of ensuring further funding of the Weizmann Institute," says Wolf, noting that private financing plays a big role there. One of Zajfman's biggest challenges will be communicating the ideas behind the science.

At 47, Zajfman is the youngest president in Weizmann's 60-year history. He laments that he'll have less time for science and for his students, but he won't stop his research altogether. Exploring nature remains his primary passion.

Also see: Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies. My Rehovot (4 Feb 2007) [FullText]

Source: Nora Eichinger. Daniel Zajfman, president, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel: Israeli physicist takes the helm at the Weizmann Institute. Naturejobs (7 Feb 2007) [FullText]

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Monday, February 05, 2007

My Rehovot Reader Responds on Weizmann Institute: Criminality or Irregularity?

Discussion matter: Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies. My Rehovot (10 February 2007) [FullText]

"This article will make everyone more anti-Dati and more anti-Yeshiva. Your intentional distortion is obvious to all. Students at Weizmann work incredibly long hours. No one will believe your slurs. No one gets “inflated salaries”. There are no “luxurious offices”, and who gets cars?

It is apparent that the Yeshiva world resents public support for medical research as opposed to Yeshiva studies. You should use your efforts to educate the public of the value of Yeshiva learning, instead of showing that Yeshiva learning produces people who just waste their time on slander. You have definitely hurt your own cause."

5 February 2007

Dr. Carol Asher
Professor Haim Garty research group
Department of Biological Chemistry
Weizmann Institute
Rehovot

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Sunday, February 04, 2007

Criminality or Irregularity? Israel State Comptroller Finds Weizmann Institute Fools Funding Bodies

Weizmann Institute Corruption Empire Downs The Integrity of Israel Science and Its International Image, an International Funding Body Must Know

Also see: Weizmann’s Former President Trades Silence on the Corruption at Rehovot’s Institute: New President to Be a Puppet in Hands of Corrupted Administration? My Rehovot (27 January 2007) [FullText]

"While the media constantly focuses on alleged irregularities in the administration of Torah institutions, reports that turn out to be unfounded and inciting, a highly critical report on corruption at Israeli universities received minimal coverage in the mainstream press.

According to a report, State Comptroller Eliezer Goldberg released last week, the Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University and the Weizmann Institute of Science were found to have serious flaws and irregularities in their account books from 2001 to 2003.

Degel HaTorah General Secretary MK Rabbi Moshe Gafni sent a letter to the acting president of the Press Council to complain about the lack of reportage on the grave figures. "To the best of my knowledge this report was not published in the mainstream press, not even in brief, while with regard to their counterparts -- institutions of higher Torah learning, i.e. the yeshivas -- any report or finding of vastly lesser significance receives front-page headlines.

"In a state where one of its principles is freedom of information and the right of the public to know without press censorship based on political views, is it desirable for such a phenomenon to take place?" wrote Rabbi Gafni, demanding that his complaint come before the Press Council's Presidential Board and its Court of Ethics.

According to the Comptroller's report, which covered the management of research and development (R&D) projects funded by external bodies and the activity of the National Science Foundation, the leading provider of research grants, the three universities that were audited transferred surplus income that did not need to be spent on the original research into private research accounts of various researchers. These surplus funds accumulated regularly because costs that really were classified as regular expenses and really were funded out of the regular budget were also listed as expenses that were associated with the research that was being funded by organizations providing financial support. These surpluses were not reported to the sources of funding. Had the respective universities returned the surplus funds to the financial supporters, more grants would have been available for other researchers.

Even the supervision of research expenses was found to be faulty. At the Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University, rather than keeping records of the research assistants' original work hours, reports were filled out based on declarations of the researcher, made long after the work was completed, just before the submission deadline. Such an arrangement is an obvious temptation for corruption, though there was no definite indication that any occurred. In addition, expenses such as reimbursements for researchers' car expenses, office renovations, business-management courses, etc., were covered using monies from the research accounts.

The Hebrew University and the Weizmann Institute reported the same expenses to two different underwriters, in 13 cases. In doing so, the universities deviated from the terms of their contracts with the funding providers regarding research costs that had not been approved. The Comptroller lodged the most severe criticism against the Weizmann Institute for keeping two sets of books, one with the researcher and another with the funding provider.
The State Comptroller lodged the most severe criticism against the Weizmann Institute for keeping two sets of books, one with the researcher and another with the funding provider.
At the Hebrew University, some 1,250 research studies are conducted annually at a total cost of NIS 288 million ($63 million). At Tel Aviv University, some 1,350 studies are conducted at a cost of NIS 144 million ($32 million) and at the Weizmann Institute, some 1,100 studies are conducted at a cost of NIS 190 million ($42 million).

The Comptroller found that the universities submitted explicitly false reports to public bodies that provide them funding, reporting that all of the funds had been expended and then surreptitiously transferring the remaining funds to their workers' research accounts.

As a result of the various accounting irregularities, "the universities and researchers received from the funding providers monies for which they were not eligible according to the funding providers' guidelines or the contracts signed with them," writes the Comptroller. "The principle of academic freedom and scientific research cannot serve as justification for deviating from standard accounting regulations and proper disclosure."

An audit conducted by the National Science Foundation revealed that the Foundation did not maintain sufficient supervision of financial management of the grants it provides. Even after the Foundation received information from the State Comptroller on the overlapping funding at the universities, it did not check whether grant recipients were indeed eligible for the funds they received.

In conclusion, the report says the universities must disclose more to the financial supporters, manage the research budget and report on expenses, based on accepted accounting guidelines, while increasing supervision and control over the use of research funds.

Following the release of the original Comptroller's report, the Council for Higher Education's Budget Planning Committee and the Board of University Chancellors set up a committee to formulate uniform regulations and guidelines and to advance the changes needed to rectify the defects. The committee submitted its recommendations in December 2003. The Budget Planning Committee adopted the regulations and directed the universities to implement them immediately. The universities agreed to the recommendations in principle and intend to update the regulations within the next few months, says the report.

In reaction to the State Comptroller's report, MK Rabbi Moshe Gafni said he would request that the Knesset be specially convened during the summer break, to discuss the scandal at the universities. He also asked Attorney General Mani Mazuz to look into the matter.

Rabbi Gafni said government ministries, including the Justice and Education Ministries, have long known that billions of shekels are transferred to the universities without any supervision or control, calling it an open secret. "I raised this issue several times in the Education Committee, but there were those who silenced the matter.

"We live in "two different countries," he says. "One nation embitters the lives of yeshiva managers with a system of supervision and control, scrupulously checking every student's identification card and then leaking to the press that `there are dishonest institutions' although nobody ever uncovered irregularities at the yeshivas. In the second nation, billions of shekels are funneled to institutions of higher education without any supervision or control, while university administrators spend enormous sums on inflated salaries, benefits, sabbatical years abroad, cars and lavish offices.

"There is no equality in the State of Israel," he says. "Only NIS 850 million ($190 million) was cut from higher education out of its enormous budget of NIS 6.4 billion ($1.4 billion). The entire yeshiva budget now comes to no more than NIS 500 million ($110 million), though the number of students is the same."

Rabbi Gafni demanded that the Attorney General apply the same stringent supervision found at Torah institutions to the universities and implement the same criteria.

MK Rabbi Yisroel Eichler sent the Attorney General a similar request. "I have never been able to comprehend why nobody at universities checks how many students arrive at the science `kollel,' what time they arrive and how many hours they study per week. Neither do I understand the enormous gap between the wages of lecturers and professors and the measly allowance given to maggidei shiur and roshei yeshivos of great stature in Torah. However, this is not a legal matter but a political and social one.

"I hereby request that the same criteria and fences to protect the public purse be implemented at the universities and the various kinds of secular cultural institutions. I would be interested to know how many cultural institutions would meet these criteria."
"The principle of academic freedom and scientific research cannot serve as justification for deviating from standard accounting regulations and proper disclosure," - the State Comptroller says in his report.
My Rehovot would add that financial irregularities (or criminality?) are tightly linked to the corrupted science, break of academic integrity. Our sources report on the practice of listing prominent Weizmann scientist(s) (on grant application by their less successful colleagues) without their knowledge (ex. listing of Neurobiology Department Professor Yadin Dudai on grant application by Prof. Irith Ginzburg without Prof.Dudai knowledge of it); submission of essentially the same project and receiving funding for it from two separate funding authorities (ex. Molecular Genetics Professor Yoram Groner, former Weizmann Vice-President for Research, two funded proposals on a strain of transgenic mice and Alzheimer's disease, by Israel Science Foundation, and Alzheimer's Association, Chicago, IL). Professor Groner is also known for writing recommendation letter (addressed to a Nobel Prize Laureate Prof. David Baltimore) to a fellow scientist (of Biological Chemistry Prof. David Wallach group) who he never worked with.

There is little doubt that sad instances of academic misconduct could be approved or directed by Boaz Avron, Weizmann's Head of Directorate for Research and Academic Affairs. As Dr. Avron states in his CV, "he was appointed Head of the Directorate for Research and Academic Affairs in 2003 (in addition to appointment as Academic Secretarty from 2001 [and his earlier service as Head of The Research Grants and Projects Office for a number of years]). In this capacity, he is responsible for (1) the Academic Affairs Office (managements of the insititutional Academic Appointments and Promotions committees as well as for the authorization of appointments of scientific consultants). He is also responsible for the administration of all Human Resources and rules related to the employment of Scientific Staff. He is coordinator of the Scientific Council (i.e. the Senate) activities; (2) The Research Grants and Projects Office (responsible for the administrative management of grants, from both external and internal sources, amounting to approximately $50 million per annum); and (3) the Visiting Scientists Office."

Another case of academic dishonesty by Weizmann scientists was recently illuminated by MyRehovot (Does Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Professor Schwartz Lie in The Major Science Publication, PNAS USA? September 7, 2007 ). The story began with the publication of widely criticized research article by Weizmann Neurobiology Professor Michal Shwartz and collegues. However, in this Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) USA publication she forgot to acknowledge her commercial ties with Rehovot firm Proneuron, thus breaking her science integrity and casting additional doubts on the article conclusions. In this story the major ethics deficiency apparently associated with the name of Professor Michael Sela, major Weizmann scientist, who formerly served as Deputy Chairman of the Institute's Board of Governors, a former President of the Institute, and as President of the Federation of the Israel Society for Experimental Biology.

Original PNAS publication by Shwartz and colleagues says that it was "edited by Michael Sela, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel, and approved July 11, 2006 (received for review May 10, 2006)". Taking into account the mechanism of submitted articles' processing at PNAS, this fact suggests Prof. Sela, a foreign member of the National Academy of Sciences USA, a publisher of PNAS, severely misused the privilege of editing PNAS manuscripts. Could it be possible he was not informed of Schwartz commercial tie? We doubt it, do you? On November 28, 2006 PNAS helped Weizmann scientists to fight their forgetfulness. By publishing an erratum, thanks to My Rehovot post of September 2006.

Source: G. Kleiman, Betzalel Kahn and Itim. NEWS: Comptroller's Report: Account Management Seriously Flawed chareidi.shemayisrael.com (24 August 2004) [FullText][Cached FullText].

Disclaimer: This material is republished for non-commercial educational purpose only. It aims to down the corruption by the Weizmann Institute and its' Administration for Research and Academic Affairs.

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Saturday, January 27, 2007

Weizmann’s Former President Trades Silence on the Corruption at Rehovot’s Institute

New President to Be a Puppet in Hands of Corrupted Administration?

A month ago Haaretz.com reported about an ongoing science corruption drama at the campus of the major Israel academic center, Rehovot’s Institute named Weizmann after the first President of the state of Israel (My Rehovot, 31 December 2006).

While Haaretz. and Weizmann officials say “at the heart of the episode are charges of inappropriate behavior on the part of the departing president, [Professor Ilan Chet, because of] private work he did, ostensibly without authorization”, the apparent true nature of the conflict is the corruption by the Weizmann administration mafia, and their need to have a President-puppet, not an independent and open-minded scientist, the qualities Prof. Chet attested for.

The conflict spread the world, as on the other side of Atlantic, the executive vice president of the Weizmann’s American Committee, Martin Kraar, actively participated in the campaign designed to fight the Institutes’ ninth President.

Rehovot-based academic center is a well known plot of corruption by Israel science. Many instances of ethically deficient and criminal affairs by the Weizmann Institute bureaucracy (including major racketeer presently acting Academic Head Boaz Avron; former Vice-President Yoram Groner, a professor of the Department of Genetics and Molecular Biology; and former Finance Division head Michael Netzer) were reported previously (www.MyRehovot.info/ru 25 May 2006, 4 June 2005)

In the latest sad example the corrupted machinery of the Weizmann empire selected its’ victim to be top Institute employee, President Ilan Chet. A Professor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Dr.Chet is a world removed plant scientist. At a time of joining the Weizmann, he was an outsider, not linked to the corruption by the Institute administration and dirty “academic” affairs taking place at its’ Rehovot’s municipal-tax-free grounds.

It seems that as an outsider, not linked to the institutional godfathers, apparently frustrated by witnessing the corruption during his five-year term of presidentship, he had a moral obligation to publicly uncover it.

In accord with this, Haaretz “did receive a letter, which present[ed Chet] complaints. The letter is written in a bombastic style, which is not typical of the former president, say some Weizmann Institute sources. It contain[ed] phrases such as "witch hunt," "McCarthyism," "incorrect facts," "duplicitous employees," "frightened and pressured workers," "a bunch of hypocrites who watch the show and cluck their tongues," "foul odors reeking from the garbage pile of lies in this libel."

MyRehovot has little doubt that Chet characteristics of the employee relationships at the Weizmann Institute are sincere and come from the bottom of the Presidents’ heart. My Rehovot past publications (25 May 2005, 4 June 2005, 4 September 2006) support strong words characterising the true atmosphere of the Weizmann Institute corruption.

Ilan Chet letter full text, however, was not published by Haaretz or any other publisher. Therefore, at the beginning of January 2007 we contacted Professor Chet, and requested a copy of his anti-coercing masterpiece, so, it could be publicly presented at MyRehovot e-pages. Dr. Chet appreciated our attention, sharing his vision on the true state of affairs at the Weizmann Institute, but refused to provide the letter. The reason is an agreement he reached with the Weizmann Institute in exchange of an undisclosed “good compensation package”.

Israel scholarship thus missed an excellent opportunity to make the flagship institution of Israel science corruption free. It is understandable, though, that Dr. Chet is an ordinary human being, who values monetary compensation of greater importance then true Jewish science development, and combating those who poison it. Only God knows when next such opportunity will visit the Weizmann Institute grounds.

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Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute scientists prove pig is a Holy animal

An Israeli institute sees opportunities how to use pig embryo transplants for curing genetic diseases.

According to the Weizmann Institute, based in Rehovot, Israel, pig embryo tissue could induce the human body to produce blood-clotting proteins for haemophilia patients and other critical substances to cure disease.

In a recent study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, immunology professor Yair Reisner and colleagues showed how such a transplant could be made feasible.

Blood-clotting

In haemophilia, a mutated gene prevents the production of a critical blood-clotting protein – treatments to this have been proved not without risk. If the body could be induced to begin producing these proteins by transplanting healthy tissue having the abilities that are lacking, this would constitute a cure.

Reisner and his lab team found that taking spleen tissue from embryonic pigs during the 42nd day of gestation exhibits optimal growth potential as well as secreting Factor 8, the blood-clotting protein missing in haemophiliacs.

Mice

In haemophiliac mice, the treatment worked within a month or two of implantation.

Although a number of problems would need to be overcome before researchers could begin to think of applying the technique to humans, the Rehovot researchers say that the experiment is "proof of principal".

Source: Pig embryo tissue may cure haemophilia. Pigprogress.net (27 Dec 2006) [FullText]

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Sunday, December 31, 2006

Rehovot's Shame: Weizmann Institute Corruption Begins at the Stone Administration Building

Please don't miss the story about the corruption by the Institutes' former vice president Yoram Groner and present academic secretary Boaz Avron (who also holds the post of the Head, Directorate for Research and Academic Affairs, Weizmann Institute Fools students and staff, My Rehovot, 25 May 2006); and Police to question heads of Weizmann Institute about embezzlement affair by Globes.co.il.

"Around two months ago, the president of the Weizmann Institute of Science, Prof. Ilan Chet, flew with his wife to New York to attend a special evening at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. It was supposed to be a farewell tribute to him ahead of the end of his term, and was part of the annual event organized by the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science. But a surprise awaited Chet upon his arrival in New York. The executive vice president of the American Committee, Martin Kraar, advised him not to attend the event - because he was not permitted to do so.

This humiliating incident was the climax of an episode that has embarrassed one of Israel's most prestigious institutions for several months. The circumstances surrounding Chet's departure from his post at the beginning of the month have become the talk of the institute's green, tranquil grounds in Rehovot. At the heart of the episode are charges of inappropriate behavior on the part of the departing president, focusing on private work he did, ostensibly without authorization, for an American company.

Chet, 67, was selected as the Weizmann Institute's ninth president five years ago. Some of his predecessors include the first president of the State of Israel, Dr. Chaim Weizmann (for whom the institute was named); Prof. Ephraim Katzir, who also served as president of Israel, and a series of such distinguished scientists as Prof. Israel Dostrovsky, one of the heads of Israel's nuclear program, and Prof. Albert Sabin, who developed the polio vaccine.

Chet is considered a world-renowned expert and research pioneer in the biological control of plant disease, concentrating on the use of environmentally friendly microorganisms to decrease the need for pesticides.

He was born in Haifa in 1939 and studied at Hebrew University's agriculture department, where he served as a tenured professor and vice president and was awarded numerous prizes for his research. The prizes he received include the Rothschild Prize for Agriculture (1990), the Israel Prize (1996), the Wolf Prize (1998) and others. He holds 30 patents for his research and inventions. As president of the Weizmann Institute, he enjoyed very comfortable conditions. There was nothing unusual about this. Weizmann Institute presidents receive an official residence in an on-campus villa, an expense account, numerous trips abroad to promote institute affairs, a car, and a salary that rivals the highest in Israeli academia. In addition to his salary, Chet also received a pension from the Hebrew University.

Chet, according to colleagues and Weizmann Institute officials, was not considered a particularly successful manager. Therefore, the leaders of the institute decided after three and a half years to search for a replacement. After interviewing several candidates, the search committee selected Prof. Daniel Zajfman, 47, a physicist who took up the post around two weeks ago.

'A lame duck'

The appointment of a search committee naturally angered Chet, who viewed it as his ouster. He became, as he said to his friends, "a lame duck." Of the eight presidents who preceded him, four served for periods of eight to 18 years; and four served shorter terms of two or three years, but they left of their own accord.

During the last year and a half of his tenure, he functioned as usual, but his mind was already occupied with his departure. He chose a house where he was to live following his departure and started renovating it. According to the terms of their employment, professors at the Weizmann Institute are entitled to housing on the beautiful campus until they retire at the age of 65. Then they move to an apartment off the campus of the Weizmann Institute, which pays their rent for another three years. Weizmann Institute presidents are entitled to live on the campus, in an apartment owned by the institute until they turn 80.

As renovations on his residence neared completion, Chet reached the conclusion that the apartment did not suit his needs and decided to move into another. He paid for the cost of the renovations in the first apartment out of pocket. At the same time, in September of this year, the Weizmann Institute's leaders received complaints that their president was providing paid consulting services to an American company that deals in intellectual property rights - and opened an investigation into him. According to the complaints, he received $5,000 a month for his consulting services. The complaints came from employees in his office. There were also charges that Chet concealed computer correspondences.

As a result of the complaints, Moroz, the chairman of the Weizmann Institute's board of governors, summoned Chet to a meeting abroad and charged him with doing private work contrary to guidelines and regulations. According to the institute's rules, any professor may do private work outside the institute for the equivalent of one day a week, provided he obtains the consent of his superiors. Chet denied the accusations against him, but the chairman was not convinced and notified him of the decision to appoint an oversight committee. Attorney Avraham Ben-Naftali, the chairman of the institute's executive committee, was appointed to head the oversight committee.

Attorney Ben Naftali and the oversight committee members were unable to find evidence for the claim that Chet committed criminal violations that should be presented to external bodies, or to the police for investigation. However, committee members felt that the president of the Weizmann Institute violated its rules by not asking for the required permits to undertake private consulting work. Therefore they found his actions to be ethically flawed. "As president of the institute, he should have served as a personal example and exercised extreme caution in all cases," stressed one committee member who asked to remain anonymous. A report on the committee's findings was submitted to the executive committee members.

When he realized that an oversight committee had been formed, Chet approached Attorney Eli Zohar and asked him to represent him. Zohar advised him not to agree to the formation of the committee and not to cooperate with it.

He also asked Chet to write his version of events, in which he vehemently denied the charges against him and argued that he did not engage in any consulting work and that all of his actions were in accordance with the laws and regulations. He also denied the charge that he destroyed e-mail correspondences to conceal his actions and argued that it could easily be ascertained on the server of the Weizmann Institute's computer unit whether this had, indeed, occurred.

Thousands in compensation

Later, Zohar contacted the institute's legal adviser, Attorney Ruta Cohen, of the offices of S. Horowitz, and the parties reached an agreement. Chet would not live on the Weizmann Institute campus and would not have access to a research lab there, and the institute would pay him compensation for waiving his right to live on the campus and to a lab. The two parties have kept confidential the details of the agreement, but according to Weizmann Institute sources, the compensation amounts to at least several tens of thousands of dollars.

Chet believes he has suffered serious injustice. He declined to respond to Haaretz's requests, but Haaretz did receive a letter, which presents his complaints. The letter is written in a bombastic style, which is not typical of the former president, say some Weizmann Institute sources. It contains phrases such as "witch hunt," "McCarthyism," "incorrect facts," "duplicitous employees," "frightened and pressured workers," "a bunch of hypocrites who watch the show and cluck their tongues," "foul odors reeking from the garbage pile of lies in this libel."

Chet refused to answer whether he wrote the letter or if it was sent in his name. A few days after the new president assumed his post, Chet left for a sabbatical at an elite American university.

The Weizmann Institute gave this response: "Around the end of the term of Weizmann Institute president, Chet, questions arose relating to consulting agreements with external bodies. The institute's administration saw fit to verify the facts as they are and, to that end, appoint members of these institutions to review the matter.

At no point was there a suspicion raised that his actions constituted a violation of the law. While the institute was conducting its inquiries, Chet decided to leave the institute to return to conducting research. It should be noted that according to the institute's procedures, a scientist here is permitted to consult for a fee equivalent to one day a week.

With regard to the matter of housing: Chet was entitled after his departure from the post of president to live in a university apartment, by virtue of his status of 'an institute professor,' which every departing president receives. A special committee found an apartment for him. The apartment found for him will now serve another institute employee."

The offices of Chet's attorney, Eli Zohar, did not respond to Haaretz's request for a comment.

Source: Yossi Melman. The president has left the building. Haartez.com (15 December 2006) [FullText]

Also see:

Rehovot Wants Weizmann Institute to Pay Local Taxes

MyRehovot Reader Responds to "Weizmann Institute Threatens Employee With a Dismissal for Bearing Magen David Patch"

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Has Become A Luxury Housing
Constructor


Rehovot Woman is a Biomedical Science Star

Is Weizmann Institute the Best International Placeto Work for Academics?

US National Academy of Sciences Member Rehovot's Michael Sela Says Weizmann Scientists Have Bad Ethics

Does Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Professor Lie in The Major Science Publication, PNAS USA?

Rehovot Scientist Teaches Global Neuroscience Community on Open Access at the Major Congress of Neurosciences

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Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Weizmann Institute Visitor Says Mideast Situation Has Deteriorated Since Last Visit

Renowned physicist Stephen Hawking on Sunday told Prime Minister Ehud Olmert that he has noticed a marked deterioration in the situation in the Middle East since he last visited the region in 1990.

The two met in Jerusalem on Sunday for a 45-minute conference, primarily regarding chances for peace in the region, past agreements and the recent cease-fire.

Hawking, Cambridge University's Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, arrived Thursday for a nine-day visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Hawking, whose visit was originally scheduled last year during the World Year of Physics, will meet with scientists and give several lectures. The British embassy organized the visit to promote scientific cooperation between the nations.

Earlier Sunday, Hawking met with aspiring scientists at the Bloomfield Science Museum in the capital. He was also due to pay an evening visit to Weizmann Institute at Rehovot.

This is Hawking's fourth visit. On a previous 1988 visit, Hawking was awarded the Wolf Prize in Physics.

Hawking was greeted at Ben-Gurion International Airport on arrival by the British Ambassador to Israel, Tom Phillips.

Next Thursday, Hawking will lecture at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem on "The Origins of the Universe." The lecture will be open to the public.

Hawking is also scheduled to lecture at Ramallah's Bir Zeit University and to hold a video conference with young Palestinian scientists from the West Bank.

Hawking's research focuses on the subject of black holes and the Theory of Relativity. Hoking won international renown with his best-selling book, "A Brief History of Time."

Source: Tamara Traubmann, Haaretz Correspondent. Hawking says Mideast situation has deteriorated since last visit. Haaretz.com (10 Dec 2006) [FullText & Talkback]

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Monday, November 13, 2006

Professor Zajfman Elected President of The Weizmann Institute of Science

Today, the Board of Governors of the Weizmann Institute of Science elected Prof. Daniel Zajfman the tenth president of the Weizmann Institute.

He will take office on Dec. 1, 2006, at which time he will replace Prof. Ilan Chet, who finishes his term of office. Prof. Zajfman will be the youngest president to serve the Weizmann Institute: He will be 47 when he takes office.

Prof. Daniel Zajfman was born in Belgium in 1959 and moved to Israel in 1979. He received a B.Sc. in 1983 and a Ph.D. in 1989 from the Technion, in Haifa, in atomic physics. He then completed post-doctoral research at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. In 1991, he returned to the Weizmann Institute as a Senior Scientist in the Particle Physics Department. In 1997, he was appointed Associate Professor and was promoted to Full professor in 2003. Since 2001, he has been an external member of the Max Planck Institute of Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany, and in 2005, he was appointed as a Director in the Max Planck Institute.

Prof. Zajfman's research focuses on the reaction dynamics of small molecules and how they influence the composition of the interstellar medium. He recreates the conditions of outer space in the laboratory using special devices called ion 'traps' or 'storage rings.' In these devices, he is able to briefly store and measure the properties of small amounts of material, as little as a few hundred atoms or molecules-worth, under the extreme conditions of interstellar space (especially very low temperatures and low densities). Some of his research has focused on the puzzle of how complex molecules are formed in outer space.

In addition to his research, Prof. Zajfman has invested much time and effort in community outreach, to the public in general and youth in particular. One of his goals is to broaden interest in and knowledge of the advances taking place on the scientific front.

Prof. Zajfman is married to Joelle, who has an M.Sc. in physics and works as a sculptor, and is father to Eyal (17) and Noga (15).

Immediately following his election, Prof. Zajfman spoke to the Board of Governors, Weizmann Institute scientists, Institute employees and friends. The following are excerpts from his speech:

The Zionist Dream

'It is for me an immense privilege to have been elected the tenth President of the Weizmann Institute of Science at the age of 47. It is an immense privilege because when I immigrated to Israel, as a young student, just after finishing high school in Belgium in 1979, I had two dreams: The first one was related to the Zionist idea: as a young Jewish boy, I was educated with a strong vision for Israel, and I wanted to help in the development of a modern homeland for the Jewish people. The second dream was more personal: During my previous visits to Israel, before I immigrated, as a tourist, I got the feeling that this is the country of unlimited opportunities, where a young adult can realize himself, and that anything which is being done here in Israel, has a very different taste than if it is done abroad. A taste of milk, honey and without any doubt, the taste of victory of a small tribe of Jewish people who exemplify in their achievements the notion that it is quality, not quantity,that really matters.

Knowledge will become an industry, research a commodity, and education a must

'What should the Weizmann Institute's goal be today? I’m convinced that the goal of this Institute is linked to the cornerstone of our civilization: The mandate of Weizmann is to work on new ideas, to foster innovation, and its no less important mandate is to prepare young people, who will bring these new ideas to fruition. I’m convinced that there are no more important tasks in the world than developing new ideas and engaging in education. This is the ultimate act of faith in the future of our country, the future of the world, and the future of mankind. This is what Weizmann is all about. And this is why I have accepted to take up this position.

'Today, the time between basic discoveries in the laboratory and their application in the everyday world has never been so short. It is a secret to nobody that the world economy is directly and strongly influenced by technologies which have been developed only very recently in research laboratories. And the large increase in human life expectancy, which has almost doubled over the last century, is the direct result of this scientific revolution. All this happened in the past century; in the present century, I believe knowledge will become an industry; research a commodity, and education a must.

The speed of light and the speed of life will be equivalent

'Big challenges are waiting for us in each of the different scientific fields in which Weizmann is involved: Physics is today reinventing itself and is on the verge of new breakthroughs in quantum technology, in the understanding of the universe, and on the unification of the force of nature. Chemistry is going through a transformation with the development of the most sophisticated analytical tools ever created, allowing the scientists in this field to probe with incredible detail into the structure of nature, from synthetic materials to the most complex bio-molecules. Mathematics, the field which is so opaque to many, is already forging new avenues into our life by influencing the way biologists understand living organisms. The life sciences themselves are right now undergoing a revolution. And this revolution will change completely the way diseases will be treated, and drugs will be designed. It is the century where speed of light and speed of life will be equivalent.

The Weizmann Institute will remain forever young, so that it can renew itself forever

'However, the privilege to be the President of the Weizmann Institute does not come without a commitment. And my commitment is to bring this Institute to an even better and stronger position than it has held in the past. It is my commitment to ensure that it remains forever young, so that it can renew itself forever. It is my commitment to promote and support the best ideas of our scientists so that they, in their laboratories, can create a better world.

We will share our scientific knowledge with the public

'In the education arena, we need to restructure our educational activities, and create new ventures which will increase the awareness of the general public to the great scientific challenges facing our society, and use this as a tool to create a community which understands what science is all about, is not afraid of new developments, and is able to use knowledge for the purpose of a better life. We must face irrationality directly, and we can do this by educating a wider portion of society. An education into the scientific basics that shape our lives so fundamentally gives citizens vital tools for rational decision-making in their daily lives, be it in medicine and health, in marketing and advertising, in economics and investments, in technology and gadgets, in environmental issues, in fact – in every field of life. Weizmann has a role to play, and it will raise the flag.'

Source: Weizmann Institute of Science PR Department. Weizmann Wonder Wander (13 Nov 2006) [FullText]

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Sunday, October 01, 2006

Rehovot's Scientists to Develop Alternative Energy Future

"An ambitious multidisciplinary research initiative into alternative, sustainable energy resources is being launched by the Weizmann Institute of Science, with the goal of significantly advancing the search for solutions to the world's most pressing energy problems. The Rehovot institute plans to raise significant funds for its Initiative for Research in Sustainable and Alternative Energy, which will support innovative scientific projects in the field.

"Developing alternative means of producing energy is a necessary step for dealing with the continuing energy crisis," says institute president Prof. Ilan Chet. "Creating fresh, sustainable methods of producing energy in the required amounts will only be possible if we can gain the knowledge to invent completely new technologies. The Weizmann Institute has an obligation to take a lead in the global effort in this field. We believe we can help shape the planet's future."

Among the major global energy challenges confronting researchers and policymakers is the sharp rise in demand for energy in recent years, fueled by rapidly rising standards of living and expanding populations, especially in China and India. Experts predict that if nothing is done to change current patterns, energy demand will rise nearly 60 percent by the year 2030.

In addition, non-renewable energy sources such as fossil fuel are running out, petroleum-based fuel supplies could be held hostage to political upheavals, affecting the peace and security of Israel and the entire world, and the continuing upward spiral of oil prices threatens the stability of the global economy. Burning fossil fuels is a major cause of air pollution and increases the accumulation of greenhouse gasses in the upper atmosphere, which may already be causing global warming.

As Weizmann Institute scientists are concerned about this state of affairs, said Chet on Tuesday, several of them have committed themselves to help search for solutions.

Chemistry faculty dean Prof. Mordechai Sheves added: "The special nature of the Weizmann Institute, with its emphasis on multidisciplinary scientific cooperation, makes it one of the most promising places to pursue such solutions." "

Source: Judy Siegel-Itzkovich. Weizmann Institute looks to alternative energy future. JPost.com (26 September 2006) [FullText]

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Monday, September 25, 2006

Weizmann's Yeda Lawyers Beat The Company Of the Institute's Former Professor. An Interim Result

"In the wake of a judge's ruling that stripped ImClone Systems Inc. of key exclusive patent rights, the biotech's biggest rival wasted little time taking advantage of the situation. Meanwhile, new ImClone director Carl Icahn blasted management for the patent loss and for ImClone's "sorry record" in general, in what could lead to a full-blown power struggle.

At Wednesday's annual meeting of ImClone shareholders in New Jersey, longtime investor Icahn, who owns nearly 14 percent of the company, was elected a director. So were two of his allies, which brings his faction on the board to four out of a total of 12 directors.

When Icahn was invited last month to stand for a board seat, he made clear his displeasure with management, including interim CEO Joseph Fischer and chairman David Kies, an M&A partner at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP in New York. In a letter filed Wednesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Icahn reiterated his views in light of Kies' refusal to step down as chairman.

"Given what I consider the sorry record of the company under your watch, it is time for you to step aside and allow someone else to be elected," Icahn wrote to Kies. "If you fail to do so, you will have thrown down the gauntlet, and we will have to react accordingly."

Part of the record Icahn cited was the loss of exclusive patent rights behind ImClone's sole marketed product, the cancer fighter Erbitux.

After the market closed Tuesday, biotech giant Amgen Inc. of Thousand Oaks, Calif., said it had licensed the same technology to which New York-based ImClone lost its exclusive rights. Fees were not disclosed.

Amgen shares were up $1.53, or 2.2 percent, to $70.98 in midday trading. ImClone was down 16 cents or half a percent to $28.95.

Amgen struck the license deal with Yeda Research and Development Co. Ltd., the commercial arm of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel. Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan ruled Tuesday that three Weizmann scientists were the legitimate owners of the patent. Yeda's outside attorney, Nicholas Groombridge of Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLC in New York, immediately said the institute would license the patent nonexclusively.

The license allows Amgen to commercialize without fear of patent infringement its developmental cancer drug Vectibix, which could reach the market by early next year. Under U.S. patent law, drug companies can pursue research and development freely without worry of infringement, but they can be sued for infringement once a product goes commercial.

Vectibix is considered the main competition to ImClone's Erbitux, which treats colorectal and head-and-neck cancers mainly in concert with traditional chemotherapy agents. Erbitux is ImClone's only marketed product and has produced $900 million in revenue for the company since its launch in 2003. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. of New York holds marketing rights to Erbitux and records its revenues. Erbitux net sales nearly doubled to $172 million in the second quarter of 2006.

An Amgen spokeswoman refused to discuss terms or timelines of Tuesday's licensing deal. Wall Street analysts estimate Amgen will pay a royalty rate in the low single digits once Vectibix comes to market. In a research note, Ron Ellis of Prudential Equity Group LLC said cost-of-goods estimates wouldn't change because of the "relatively minor size" of the royalty, which he estimated at 2 percent to 3 percent of total sales.

The patent in question, known as 866 after the final three digits in its assigned code, covers the use of a specific monoclonal antibody in conjunction with traditional chemotherapy treatments. Erbitux is mostly used this way, and ImClone has enjoyed exclusive rights to the patent since Erbitux came to market in 2003. Until Buchwald ruled otherwise Tuesday, French drug giant Sanofi-Aventis SA was the patent holder.

ImClone officials said Tuesday they will appeal the judge's decision, seek to have the patent overturned and explore the possibility of licensing from Yeda, which actually could mean a lower fee than what ImClone was paying Sanofi-Aventis. "If it's not exclusive, it certainly could be less," said ImClone vice president for intellectual property Tom Gallagher."

Also see: US National Academy of Sciences Member Rehovot's Michael Sela Says Weizmann Scientists Have Bad Ethics. MyRehovot.info (5 August 2006) [FullText]

Source: Alex Lash. Icahn Blasts ImClone Management. The Deal (25 September 2006) [FullText]

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Sunday, September 24, 2006

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute’s Commercial Arm has plenty of innovative drugs in the pipeline

Yeda Research and Development Company Ltd. is the commercial arm of the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel’s leading center of research and graduate education. The Institute’s activities range across the spectrum of contemporary science. Yeda holds an exclusive agreement with the Institute for the marketing and commercialization of new developments emerging from the Institute’s laboratories.

In the pipeline:

Diapep 277

Peptide vaccine for the treatment of type 1 diabetes, acts to protect the insulin producing beta-cells from auto immune destruction. DiaPep277 is licensed to Develogen (formerly Peptor Ltd.) and has successfully completed phase II clinical development. A pivotal phase III trial for the treatment of type 1 diabetes commenced in September 2005.

Hepex B

Combination of two fully human monoclonal antibodies against the hepatitis B virus surface antigen, HBsAg. It is being developed to prevent hepatitis B, known as HBV, re-infection following a liver transplant. Licensed to XTL Biopharmaceuticals Ltd. (XTLbio). HepeX-B is currently in a Phase IIb trial in liver transplant patients.

ProCord

Cell- based therapy for spinal cord injury. Licensed to Proneuron, currently in phase II/III (fast track) clinical trials.

Edratide

CDR1-based peptide derived from a human anti-DNA antibody. Currently in phase I clinical trials for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), licensed to Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

OxSodrol

Recombinant copper-zinc Superoxide dismutase - (CuZnSOD) for prevention of pulmonary damage in neonates, licensed to Bio-Technology General, Inc., a subsidiary of Ferring Inc. The company completed a phase II clinical trial on use of CuZnSOD in treatment of bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

Onercept

Recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-binding protein-1 (r-TBP-1), licensed to Inter-Lab Ltd., a Serono company. Currently in phase I clinical trials for endometriosis.

Tadekinig

Recombinant IL-18 binding protein (r-IL-18 BP), currently in phase I clinical trials for Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis, licensed to Serono.

XTL-6865

Combination of two fully human monoclonal antibodies (Ab68 and Ab65) against the hepatitis C virus E2 envelope protein. It is being developed to prevent hepatitis C, known as HCV, re-infection following a liver transplant and for the treatment of chronic HCV. Licensed to XTL Biopharmaceuticals Ltd. (XTLbio). Currently in phase Ia/Ib clinical trials.

Tookad

Pd-bacteriophephorbide photosensitizer (WST09) is a novel light-responsive drug, based on chlorophyll that has been shown to kill tumor tissues by destroying their blood supply after local illumination with a diode laser (763 nm). It then rapidly clears from the body. Licensed to Steba Biotech. This photodynamic therapy is currently in phase I/II clinical trials as second line therapy for prostate cancer patients who had had failed radiation therapy.

Source: Van Nadel. Weizmann Institute’s Yeda has plenty of innovative drugs in the pipeline. (24 September 2006) [FullText][Cached Version]

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Saturday, September 16, 2006

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Places Number 151 on the List of World's Top Universities. Far Behind Other Israeli Institutions.

Jerusalem’s Hebrew University has been named one of the world’s top 100 universities by Newsweek magazine.

Hebrew U. places number 82 on the list, which is headed by Harvard, Stanford and Yale. It is the only university in the Middle East to be included on the list.

Newsweek said its study took into account "openness and diversity, as well as distinction in research."

A separate ranking of the world’s top 500 universities published earlier this year by China’s Shanghai Jiaotong University ranked Hebrew University in 60th place. The Chinese report rated the university in 78th place the previous year. Also placing on the report were Haifa’s Technion (115), Tel Aviv University (116), Rehovot’s Weizmann Institute (151), Bar Ilan University (303), Ben Gurion University (304) and the University of Haifa (467).

Newsweek based half of its score on the three criteria used by Shanghai Jiaotong: the number of highly-cited researchers in various academic fields, the number of articles published in Nature and Science magazines, and the number of articles listed in the ISI Social Sciences and Arts and Humanities indices.

Another 40% of the score used the four criteria that the Times of London ranking system used: the percentage of international faculty, the percentage of international students, citations per faculty member and the ratio of faculty to students.

The last 10% was based on the number of volumes in the universities' libraries.

Founded by Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Martin Buber, and Chaim Weizmann, among others, Hebrew University has a reputation for its studies in the sciences and religion, housing the world's largest Jewish studies collection. Recent Nobel Prize Laureate Robert Aumann is a professor at the university.

Source: Ezra HaLevi. Hebrew University Ranks Among World's Top Universities. INN.com (15 September 2006) [FullText]

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Monday, September 04, 2006

Does Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Professor Schwartz Lie in The Major Science Publication, PNAS USA?

A vaccination that stimulates immune cell production could be key to enabling people with serious spinal injuries to walk again, researchers say.

However, the study has been criticised by some experts in the neurological field who remain sceptical about the findings.

The controversial research claims come from a team at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, who say that key immune cells can work with stem cells to mend broken spines in mice.

Their latest study involved a vaccine that increased the numbers of immune cells, known as T-helper cells, that specifically protect myelin – a protein that coats nerve cells. The vaccine encouraged and protected stem-cells in the spine as they grew and become nerve cells, to such an extent that previously crippled animals were able to resume walking, they say.

However, the new claims have reignited a major controversy in neuroscience.

Significant involvement
Traditional theory suggests that the delicate central nervous system needs to be isolated from the heavy-handed cells of the immune system in order to function properly and affect repairs.

Michal Schwartz, who led the latest study, has spent the last 10 years working on a different theory: that a significant degree of immune system involvement is needed for the central nervous system to repair itself.

In February 2006, Schwartz published a study in Nature Neuroscience demonstrating that immune cells had an important role in nerve cell regeneration.

Non-invasive treatment
Now she reports that by boosting T-cells at the same time as injecting mice with stem cells that had partially differentiated into nerve cells, she was able to reverse severe spinal damage.

Injections of the stem cells without the T-cell-stimulating vaccine had little effect. Significantly, the myelin vaccine alone had more effect than simply injecting stem cells, she says.

The findings suggest that “immuno-supressive drugs should not be used” with future stem-cell therapy for spinal injuries, she says.

The team simply injected the animals’ soft tissue, so invasive, intra-spinal injections would be unnecessary, they believe.

"No scientific basis"
Schwartz’s belief that key neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, are caused by an over-active immune system has been greeted with some scepticism, however.

Geoffrey Raisman, director of University College London’s Spinal Repair Unit, was unequivocal in his denouncement. “There is no scientific basis for this paper,” he told New Scientist.

“The experiments reported do not have validity. It is beyond the bounds of possibility that this approach could improve spinal cord injury. I am surprised that it was published,” he adds.

Diverse functions
Another leading researcher in this field, Phillip Popovich at Ohio State University, US, has been less critical of Schwartz’s theories, describing them as “encouraging”. He too, however, has called on more substantial animal research to be done before tests on humans are even considered.

Schwartz cites papers she has published in recent years in reputable journals such as Nature Medicine and the Journal of Clinical Investigation as support for her theories. “I’m aware that this research is controversial. I think that neurologists are not aware of the diverse functions of the immune system,” she says.

“I think they’re locked into the concept that the immune system can be only detrimental to the central nervous system. But I think there’s clearly evidence now to say that’s not the case.”

MyRehovot note: It is important to note that Prof. Schwartz is a key scientist behind based in Rehovot biotech company called Proneuron. This is where she holds the position of the Chairperson of the company's Scientific Advisory Board. It is therefore not clear whether Dr. Schwartz speaks for the Science, for Proneuron, or for Yeda, Weizmann Institute Commercial Branch. Contrary to the PNAS Conflict of Interest Policy and academic ethics standards, Professor Schwartz latest PNAS article is silent about her company affiliation. Moreover, Dr. Schwartz and her co-authors disinform readers that they have no financial conflict of interest, as illustrated by the following article front matter statement: "Conflict of interest statement: No conflicts declared." Is this a lie? One may wish to notice this article was edited by Weizmann Institutes' Professor Michal Sela, a foreign member of the National Academy of Sciences USA, a publisher of PNAS. Taking into account the mechanism of submitted articles' processing at PNAS, this fact may cast additional doubts on the integrity of science by Weizmann Institute researchers.

Journal reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ( PNAS ) USA (DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0603747103) [Abstract and FullText]

Source: Enlisting the immune system to fix broken spines. NewScientist.com news. New Scientist (22 August 2006) [FullText]

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Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Rehovot Scientists Cracks Code of DNA Strand

"A research team headed by Weizmann Institute scientists has succeeded in cracking the genetic code that sets down the rules for where on the DNA strand tiny spheres called nucleosomes are located. Their findings appeared Thursday in the prestigious journal Nature.

Nucleosomes provide the lowest level of compaction required to fit DNA into the cell nucleus. They are made up of DNA and four pairs of proteins called histones, and are important in regulating the transcription (the transfer of genetic information from DNA to RNA, which enables the cell to follow the gene's instructions) of DNA by preventing RNA polymerase from accessing the promoter regions of genes not needed by the cell. If the requirements of the cell change, enzymes known as remodeling factors can remove or change the position of the nucleosome to allow access.

Several diseases, including cancer, are typically accompanied or caused by DNA mutations and the way DNA organizes itself to form chromosomes. Such mutational processes may be influenced by the relative accessibility of the DNA to various proteins and by the organization of the DNA in the cell nucleus. Therefore, the scientists believe that the nucleosome positioning code they discovered may aid scientists in the future in understanding the mechanisms underlying many diseases.

Until Dr. Eran Segal, from the Rehovot institute's computer science and applied mathematics department, and research student Yair Field came to their conclusions together with colleagues from Chicago's Northwestern University, no one knew what determined how, when and where a nucleosome would be positioned along the DNA sequence.

Nucleosomes, which resemble "beads on a string of DNA" when observed through an electron microscope, are known to play an important role in the cell's day-to-day function. Access to DNA wrapped in a nucleosome is blocked for many proteins, including those responsible for some of life's most basic processes. Among these barred proteins are factors that trigger DNA replication, transcription and repair. The positioning of nucleosomes defines the segments in which these processes can and can't take place.

These limitations are significant, as most of the DNA is packaged into nucleosomes. A single nucleosome contains about 150 genetic bases (the "letters" that make up a genetic sequence), while the free area between neighboring nucleosomes is only about 20 bases long. It is in these nucleosome-free regions that processes such as transcription can be initiated.

For many years, scientists had been unable to agree on whether the placement of nucleosomes in living cells was controlled by the genetic sequence itself. Segal's team managed to prove that the DNA sequence indeed encodes "zoning" information on where to place nucleosomes. They also characterized this code and then, using the DNA sequence alone, were able to accurately predict a large number of nucleosome positions in yeast cells.

Since the proteins that form the core of the nucleosome are among the most conserved in nature by evolution, the scientists believe the genetic code they identified is also conserved in many organisms, including humans.

To unravel the code, the scientists examined 200 different nucleosome sites on DNA to determine whether the sequences around them had something in common. Mathematical analysis revealed similarities between the nucleosome-bound sequences, and eventually uncovered a specific "code word." This "code word" consists of a periodic signal that appears every 10 bases on the sequence.

The regular repetition of this signal helps the DNA segment bend sharply into the spherical shape required to form a nucleosome. To identify this nucleosome positioning code, the research team used models of probability to characterize the sequences bound by nucleosomes and developed a computer algorithm to predict the encoded organization of nucleosomes along an entire chromosome.

The team's findings provided insight into another mystery that has long been puzzling molecular biologists: how cells direct transcription factors to their intended sites on the DNA, as opposed to the many similar but functionally irrelevant sites along the genomic sequence."

Source: Judy Siegel-Itzkovich. Weizmann team cracks code of DNA strand. JPost.com (25 July 2006) [FullText]

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Saturday, June 24, 2006

Rehovot Discovery News: The evolutiopn of Smell

Our hominid and ape ancestors actually had more keen noses, since they relied more upon their sense of smell for mating, socialising, detecting predators, finding food and other tasks.

Scientists at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel, have found that many genes for smell in humans were turned off permanently over the course of our evolution, although the DNA continues to exist as inactive "pseudogenes".

Ruiz and his team suggest that the electronic nose will return some of these smelling skills to us.

The invention may even improve upon nature, at least in terms of precision and reliability.

"We think that a commercial prototype could be available in between five and 10 years, although there are still some important issues to be solved," he says.

"Initially we expect that the devices will work with body fluids like urine or blood."

Source: Discovery News: The evolution of smell (19 June 2006) [FullText]

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Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Rehovot Scientist to Speak on Multiple Sclerosis at 14th Annual Women’s Health Congress

New Rochelle, NY— For reasons we do not understand, autoimmune disorders are much more prevalent in women than in men. In the case of multiple sclerosis, the female to male ratio is over 2:1. This conundrum will be explored in a dinner symposium on "Neurological and Autoimmune Challenges in Women – Advances in Multiple Sclerosis" with Ruth Arnon, Ph.D., Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel, at the 14th Annual Congress on Women’s Health, June 3-6, 2006 at the Hilton Head Marriott Beach & Golf Resort. The complete program is available online at www.bioconferences.com/wh The dinner symposium is supported by an educational grant from Teva Neuroscience.

The Congress provides practical, clinical information on cutting-edge therapeutic protocols, novel diagnostic procedures, and innovative research advances that impact on patient care to physicians, nurses, and policymakers. Conference Chair Susan Kornstein, M.D., Executive Director of the Virginia Commonwealth University Institute for Women's Health, a DHHS National Center of Excellence, Richmond, Virginia and Co-Chairs Gail Stuart, Ph.D., APRN, BC, FAAN, Dean, College of Nursing, Medical College of South Carolina, Charleston and JudyAnn Bigby, M.D., Harvard Medical School, have convened an outstanding faculty and an array of informative sessions that will focus on hot topics in cardiology, menopause, diagnostics and therapeutics, lifestyle medicine, integrative medicine, and common clinical conditions. This year’s Congress will also highlight obesity and weight management in women in a special morning session in collaboration with NAASO: The Obesity Society. The full program is available at www.bioconferences.com/wh

The Congress is sponsored by University of South Florida College of Medicine and Journal of Women’s Health, in partnership with the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women. Collaborating Organizations include American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, American Autoimmune Related Diseases Association, American Chronic Pain Association, American Heart Association, American Menopause Foundation, Anxiety Disorders Association of America, Arthritis Foundation, NAASO: The Obesity Society, National Stroke Association, National Women’s Health Resource Center, and WomenHeart: The National Coalition for Women with Heart Disease.

Corporate supporters include GlaxoSmithKline, GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare, Procter & Gamble, Procter & Gamble Feminine Care, Sanofi Aventis, Takeda Pharmaceuticals America, Inc., Teva Neuroscience, and Wyeth.

The Congress offers 19.75 category 1 hours of Continuing Medical Education, 23.8 hours of Continuing Nursing Education credits, 19.75 ADA credits, 19.75 CE credits for psychologists, and 19.75 hours of Continuing Pharmacy Education sponsored by the University of South Florida.

Source: Renowned Researcher Ruth Arnon, Ph.D. to Speak on Multiple Sclerosis at 14th Annual Women’s Health Congress. Mary Ann Liebert Inc., Publishers (23 May 2006) [FullText]

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Saturday, March 18, 2006

Weizmann Institute is Third Most Profitable Scholar Institution

Israel’s top university counted USD 456 million in revenues in 2005; in order, Tel Aviv University, Weizmann Institute, Ben Gurion and Technion next most profitable

The Hebrew University in Jerusalem continues to lead as Israel's most profitable university, counting revenues of USD 456.7 million in 2005, according to data released Sunday by the Dan and Bradstreet Company Israel.

The overall revenue from Israel’s 25 leading universities and colleges totaled roughly USD 2.3 billion in 2005, a 3.5 percent rise since
the previous year. Profits from tuition fees only represented 20 percent of total revenues, as the majority of profits were attributed to various governmental subsidies and private endowments.

Hebrew University profits from tuition totaled USD 38.1 million in 2005 and governmental budget funds totaled USD 208.8 million in 2005. Another USD 209.8 million came from “other sources.”

Tel Aviv University rates as the country's second most profitable institution, with profits of USD 330 million in 2005. USD 66 million came from tuition fees, USD 156 million from governmental subsidies, and USD 108 million from other sources. The study counted 29,254 students enrolled at Hebrew University in 2005.

The Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot ranked third, with revenues of USD 302.8 million, USD 73 million of which were government subsidies and USD 220 million from other sources.

Source: Hebrew U. still most profitable university. Ynet.co.il (12 March 2006) [FullText]

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Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Rehovot's Weizmann Institute of Science: a Caterpillar of Israeli High Tech Success

Incubators have played an important role in the development of Israel’s new economy, with initiatives undertaken by the government but also by public entities or universities. Among them is the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel’s multidisciplinary center devoted to research and teaching in the natural sciences.

The Weizmann Institute

Located on a 1.2-square km campus in the town of Rehovot, 22 km south of Tel Aviv and 42 km west of Jerusalem, the Weizmann Institute employs 1,600 scientists, technicians, and research students. It operates on an annual budget of some 8176 million and manages more than 250 research groups across the spectrum of contemporary science. The Institute comprises five faculties: biology, biochemistry, chemistry physics and mathematics, and computer science, as well as the Feinberg Graduate School.

Within the Israeli R&D environment the Weizmann Institute plays an important role. The Institute is involved in almost all the scientific activities in hard science in Israel. It was the first in Israel to introduce cancer research; helped and supported the creation of the first science park, Kiryat Weizmann; and was the first to create a commercial arm to promote exploitation of Institute research. Furthermore, the Institute has extensively contributed to the Israeli economy and society in the fields of creating new drugs, agriculture, research, and education.

The Institute is the third oldest among the six universities in Israel which are engaged in research in hard sciences. It is looked upon as a model inside Israel in relation to technology transfer and enjoys national and international renown in R&D.

Yeda Research and Development Company Ltd., Commercial Branch of the Weizmann Institute

In addition, the Weizmann Institute was the first academic institute in Israel to create a technology transfer organization to promote the commercialization of its research: Yeda Research and Development Company Ltd. Founded in 1959, Yeda’s mission is to transfer technology from the Institute to the world marketplace by locating venture capital to create the necessary start-up companies. Today, it employs 11 people, of whom five are professionals: a director who is an experienced businessman scientist, a lawyer, a patent attorney, and an accountant.

Yeda participates in start-up companies based on projects initiating Institute research. Six such ventures were set up in 1998-1999: two each the fields of life sciences, chemistry, and electronics. By September 1999, 19 start-ups were established as a direct result of Institute research; in each of these Yeda was an active partner. Yeda realized that it was unlikely that any of the companies would show profits overnight, but if they showed the patience, they would probably thrive in the long term.

In 1997 Yeda made an agreement with PAMOT, a venture capital fund. PAMOT now has the right of first option on all Yeda’s projects. They are obliged to create a start-up but cannot deal with licensing so they cannot compete with Yeda. However PAMOT can create a “virtual company” within the institute and check the application of the technology to the market. So far they have established six new companies.

By associating with a venture capital fund, Yeda solved a problem faced by many research institutes: how to attract pre-seed funds. Further-more, Yeda does not demand up-front payment from start-up companies, as they would do in a licensing operation; this is done to ease the financial burden on the start-ups.

The Incubator for Technological Entrepreneurship Kiryat Weizmann (ITEK)

Another important creation from the Weizmann Institute is ITEK, the Incubator for Technological Entrepreneurship Kiryat Weizmann, which started operating in August 1991 and hosts 11 high-tech incubator firms. Another nine have already left and operate independently. An analysis of this incubator shows the characteristic key success factors of a major Israeli incubator:

Substantial financial support provided to the start-ups.

Incubator administrators play an active role in each project for the entire duration. Yerushalmi, the head of the ITEK incubator, is personally involved in each of the start-ups, therefore contributing to a permanent link between the incubator activity and the companies emerging from it.

Consultancy as a complete set of services is concretely and easily available for the start-ups.

Responsibility is expected of the incubator managers vis-à-vis the state, who must show proof that the incubator operates as a normal commercial company, although it is a non-profit organization. This guarantees both professionalism and credibility of the incubator’s involvement.

Scientists can work undisturbed during the two years authorized for start-ups.

A small but very active and dynamic steering committee (five people, volunteers) with minimum bureaucracy.

Focus in a few subjects (product creation, high tech, company creation etc.).
Measurement methods, measuring success by the amount of money raised from investors.

Source: Par Prof. Daniel Rouach. The Weizmann Institute : a pilar of Israeli high tech success. Rubrique: Universités, sciences et r&d. Mots-clé Case study: the Weizmann institute of science and the Itek incubator (last viewed 19 March 2006) [FullText]

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Friday, December 09, 2005

Will New President Down Rehovot's Weizmann Institute Corruption?

"The Weizmann Institute of Science will have a new president a year from now when Prof. Ilan Chet's term ends. The Rehovot institute's search committee nominated Prof. Daniel Zajfman, who will become the institute's 10th president upon the formal approval of the board of directors.

Zajfman, an expert in atomic physics, married and the father of two, was born in Belgium in 1959 and moved to Israel 20 years later. He received his BSc in 1983 and PhD in 1989 from the Technion in Haifa. He then completed post-doctoral research at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago. In 1991, he returned to the Weizmann Institute as a senior scientist in the particle physics department and promoted to full professor in 2003. Today, he serves as head of the physics services unit. For the last four years, he has been an external member of the Max Planck Institute of Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg and in 2005 was named a director of the German institute. In this capacity, he is currently overseeing a 4.5 million euro project to construct an ion storage ring that will work at a temperature approaching absolute zero.

His research focuses on the reaction dynamics of small molecules and how they influence the composition of the interstellar medium. He recreates the conditions of outer space in the laboratory using special devices called ion "traps" or "storage rings." In these devices, he is able to briefly store and measure the properties of small amounts of material, as little as a few hundred atoms‚ under the extreme conditions, especially very low temperatures and low densities, of interstellar space. Some of his research has focused on how complex molecules are formed in outer space.

When making the announcement on Tuesday, the Weizmann Institute said Prof. Zajfman has invested much time and effort in community outreach to the public in general and youth in particular. One of his goals is to broaden interest in, and knowledge of, the advances taking place on the scientific front."

Source: Judy Siegel-Itzkovich. Weizmann Institute nominates new president. Jerusalem Post (6 Dec2005) [FullText]

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Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Will Rehovot's Weizmann Vaccine Help Diseased Brains?

Not to miss: Recent clinical research Cases of a Vaccine against Alzheimer's type neurodegeneration indicate vaccination approach to cure nervous system diseases can harm patients rather then cure diseases. See article "Goodbuy came early" for a sad immunization problem of dementing senior and her family members.

Research being conducted at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot may lead to a therapeutic vaccine to stop degeneration of aging or diseased brains, says Michal Schwartz, professor of neuroimmunology at the facility. Schwartz presented the results of her research to the national annual meeting of the Canadian Society for the Weizmann Institute of Science, held last month at the Park Hyatt Hotel in Toronto. She said that when she began her study on slowing down the loss of cognition and memory that can occur in aging, “I was told to forget about it – that it would ruin my reputation.” Gradually, however, her work has become recognized as groundbreaking, she said.

The key lies in the functioning of the immune and auto-immune systems, Schwartz said. "The immune system, she explained, protects the body against potential dangers such as bacteria, viruses, and microorganisms, while the autoimmune system, if it’s working properly, recognizes the body’s own tissues and ensures that they are not compromised. If things are not working properly, the immune system will attack the body’s own elements, leading to such diseases as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis and type 1 diabetes. The thinking used to be, Schwartz said, that autoimmune cells were part of the pathology of illness, and therefore must be destroyed wherever they were found. Through her research into spinal cord injury and brain trauma, however, she discovered that autoimmune cells are needed to fight injury.

For instance, there are 10 million nerves in the spine, and not all of them are usually injured at the same time. Without the appropriate measures, Schwartz said, the non-injured cells will degenerate along with the damaged ones. But if it’s made possible, healthy cells will attach themselves to neighbouring nerve fibres and, by doing so, stop the process of degeneration. It also used to be believed that there are a fixed number of nerve cells and that some are lost as a person ages. If some of the remaining cells are injured, it was thought, there was no way to make new ones.

Schwartz and her team at Weizmann have found, however, that by activating the autoimmune system, rather than destroying it, they can stop the progression of diseases. The idea, she said, is to enlist the aid of stem cells in the brain that can be utilized for this purpose. Researchers are still working on finding a drug that will help do this. and current studies are focusing on Copaxone, a drug usually used for multiple sclerosis, Schwartz said.

She stressed that the vaccine she is working on won’t prevent a disease from occurring, but will only prevent further damage. The annual meeting was dedicated to the memory of Arthur Konviser, a past president of the Canadian Society for the Weizmann Institute who died recently."(1)

In addition to her service as Weizmann Professor Dr. Schwartz leads Rehovot Science Park based Proneuron Biotechnologies, the company she helped to organize in 1996. According to the company web site, at present Michal Schwartz serves as Chairperson of the company's Scientific Advisory Board. She avoids mentioning her commercial affiliation in scientific publications, however. Medical ethicists would name this a major breach of academic integrity.

Source (1): Leila Spesman. Researcher works to slow cognition loss among seniors. Canadian Jewish News (1 December 2005) [FullText]

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Saturday, November 12, 2005

Is Weizmann Institute the Best International Placeto Work for Academics?

According to the US-based The Scientist magazine, "The Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, comes out on top of our annual survey for the best academic institutions to work outside of the United States. The strength of the institution, says president Ilan Chet, is collaboration between Weizmann's five main faculties: mathematics and computer science, biology, biochemistry, chemistry, and physics.

The systems biology and biological physics programs, for example, combine many of these fields, as does the DNA-based nanocomputers recently developed there. And the Institute gives researchers the freedom to explore these options, in part by minimizing teaching obligations. "We have only graduate students, so we teach only several hours a year," Rony Seger, a professor in the biological regulation department, writes in an E-mail.

The Institute also encourages its members to collaborate outside its bounds, according to Seger. "We receive each year a very generous traveling fund," he writes. "So we (and our students) have no problem staying in touch with laboratories in the US or in Europe, and to attend conferences."

When they are not abroad, says Chet, the campus setting is a major factor in making Weizmann a great place to work for many of its 2,100 scientists. "It's a very quite and peaceful environment," he says. Seger agrees, calling the campus "one of the nicest gardens in Israel." The Institute provides members with housing for six years until tenure, then three more following tenure. In their off time, they can attend the student theater or visit the recreation center, which according to Seger has a nice swimmingpool and is cheap to join.

One area in which the Institute could improve is the number of lab personnel, says Seger. "We need more lab technicians or research assistant professors that can help in the maintenance and day to day management of the laboratories," he writes. But according to Chet, what is most important is the quality of the people at Weizmann..."

"...The respondents to The Scientist's third annual Best Places to Work in Academia survey conveyed a clear message: The people that they work with, the resources at their disposal, and their opportunities for career advancement are the leading factors in determining their satisfaction with their work environment. Researchers from across the United States and abroad ­ more than 2,600 in all ­ rated survey questions relating to peers, research resources, and tenure as the most important, and the institutions that earned high marks in those categories came out on top in this year's rankings."

The survey clearly could not envision many of the issues of specific Weizmann relevance, such as the Institute non-efficiency in bed distribution for visitors (see MyRehovot 10 Nov. 2005), administrative prohibition to apply for certain grants and many other instances of corruption (see MyRehovot/ru of 25 May 2005 and 4 June 2005). These questions could well delete Rehovot major academic center from the 2005 list of Best International Places to Work in Academia.

Source: Maria W. Anderson, Ishani Ganguli. Biobusiness: Best Places to Work in Academia, 2005. Find out whether your institution ranked among the best in The Scientist's annual survey. The Scientist Vol.19(21): 39 (7 November 2005) [FullText].

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Thursday, November 10, 2005

Rehovot Bed Saga: Weizmann Wonder Wander

By Erin Israel

"Picture, if you will, your mattress. In fact, go take a good look at it. Does it have springs? Is it pleasantly squishy when you sit on it? Does it have (sniffle) a quilted top layer? Would flipping it require the better part of a morning (and a stiff drink)?

Then I envy you.

One morning in May, the phone rang shortly after breakfast with a call from the Housing Officer.

"How old are your beds?" she asked.

"I beg your pardon?" I said.

"Your beds. What numbers are they?"

"Our beds are numbered?" I asked, gazing into my empty coffee cup. It was not yet nine o'clock in the morning. "How fascinating."

I thought I heard her groan. "Well, go look, please," Olga demanded.

A brief search revealed that our beds were not numbered, but that we had enough dust under there to land Martha in therapy for years. I dutifully returned to the phone to report some, but not all, of this.

"They aren't numbered," I said.

"Ohhh..." said Olga with a ruminative sigh. "That means you have old beds."

"Really?" Our beds were older than numbers. How about that. "And?"

"We will replace them. Soon." Then Olga hung up. I went into the bedroom to glare at the beds.

"You're not long for this world," I told them. They lay there stiffly and ignored me.

Picture, if you will, a hard futon. Now imagine it sliced horizontally in half and lopped into four feet by six and a half feet dimensions. Two of these "mattresses" comprise our bed. When we moved here, for weeks, I dreamed that I was camping. That's how hard they are.

In essence, the "mattresses" are no more than Very Ancient Foam, with a thin layer of harder, sturdier foam on either side. They may indeed be older than most things on the planet, and certainly most things known to mankind. However, it could be worse: one professor told us that, when he stayed in our apartment complex in the 70's, he slept on a straw mattress.

For the last five months, I've asked the Housing Officer when the beds would be replaced. First, it appeared that the looming Disengagement was too intense a subject of discussion for anyone to merit reflecting on such mundane matters as new beds. "When all that dies down," she told me, "come back."

After Disengagement, I went back (not wearing orange, the anti-disengagement color, of course). Now the complex was beginning to build a fence, and, on that day, workers were pouring concrete near the Housing Officer's office. She shook her head sadly. "What can I do? Come back when this mess is over."

This week, I went back, on a routine laundry-token run. I inquired hopefully about the beds, since there was no evidence of any concrete pouring or socio-political upheaval taking place near the office.

Olga leaned back in her chair. "Well, you know about the problem with the management... We will deal with the beds after that dies down." She looked at me intently. "You know, it's a complex process: we must find an empty apartment that we can switch the new beds out of, and switch yours into."

"You mean there are empty apartments with new beds in them?" I asked. "Right now?"

"Yes," she sighed. "And it's a matter of rearranging, and reorganizing, and... Very difficult. In a week, after everything dies down, come back, and we'll see."

I gritted my teeth, picked up my bag, and headed home, where I shut the bedroom door so I couldn't see the beds.

Then it occurred to me that perhaps I have been going about this the wrong way, all along. In a country where a cartel runs the banks and the Prime Minister's son has been convicted in a graft scheme, bribery is an obvious solution; indeed, a lifestyle! But a tiny bottle of Austrian liqueur for Olga, when we returned from Europe in July, was clearly insufficient, and -- given without cynicism -- ineffective. Surely, if I'd baked a cake for Olga way back in May, we would have new beds by now.

Is this how bribes work? All I have to do is bake something? I shall commence the Betty Crocker for Beds campaign next week, then.

In the meantime, send me your best cake recipe."

Source: Erin Israel. "A-va-KAYSH luh-da-BAYR eem ha-muh-na-HAYL." "I want to speak to the manager." (7 November 2005) [FullText]

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Monday, February 21, 2005

Rehovot Scientist Among World's 50 Most Influential Researchers

"Prof. Ehud Shapiro of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot has been named Research Leader in the field of Nanotechnology and Molecular Electronics by Scientific American. Prof. Shapiro was listed among the Scientific American 50 - the magazine's annual roster of outstanding acts of leadership in science and technology - for 2004. Prof. Shapiro received the recognition for the creation of biomolecular computing devices. The tiny devices are soo small that more than a trillion fit into one drop of water. They are made entirely of DNA and other biological molecules."
Source: Weizmann Scientist Among World's 50 Most Influential Researchers. IsraelNN.com (8 November 2004 / 24 Cheshvan 5765) [FullText]

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