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Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Father of former Brewer farmhand wins Nobel Prize‏

Checks rosters for a Chandrasekhar or a Ružička. Nope.

Two Americans and an Israeli won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their work on how the DNA code is translated into life, findings that have been used to fight infectious disease.

Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, 57, who heads the Structural Studies Division at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England; Thomas A. Steitz , 69, Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University in Connecticut, and Ada E. Yonath, a professor at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, will share the 10 million-krona ($1.4 million) award, the Nobel Assembly said at a press conference in Stockholm today.

...Steitz, also an American, was born in 1940 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has a doctorate in molecular biology and biochemistry from Harvard University and teaches molecular biophysics and biochemistry at Yale. His son Jon Steitz is a former pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers baseball team.

Jon Steitz

Thanks to Rich Rifkin.

Repoz Posted: October 07, 2009 at 10:55 PM | 51 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralMilwaukeeInternational

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   1. Rich Rifkin  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 10:25 PM (#3344690)
Assuming genetic inheritance and an educationally nurturing environment explains most of IQ, I would not be surprised if Jon Steitz had the highest IQ in pro baseball history -- or at least among the Brew Crew. Not only did his father win the Nobel Prize, but his mother, Prof. Joan Steitz of Yale, is a world renowned molecular biologist and might herself win a Nobel Prize someday.

She's already won the Gairdner Foundation International Award; the U.S. Steel Foundation Award in Molecular Biology; the National Medal of Science, National Science Foundation; the Christopher Columbus Discovery Award in Biomedical Research; the UNESCO-L'Oréal Award for Women in Science; and the Lewis S. Rosenstiel Award for Distinguished Work in Basic Medical Science.
   2. battlekow  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 10:45 PM (#3344701)
I would not be surprised if Jon Steitz had the highest IQ in pro baseball history -- or at least among the Brew Crew.

Clearly you never watched Alex Sanchez play.
   3. Textbook Editor  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 11:21 PM (#3344720)
High cotton indeed.

As someone who edits physics textbooks (and has worked on chemistry textbooks), I always get a wee bit excited for this week, as I retain faint hopes some professor I've corresponded with wins a Nobel. It's never happened.
   4. Howie Menckel  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 11:24 PM (#3344722)
Does Nobel have finalists, too, or is it "all in" in terms of winning - or nothing?
   5. Juan V has had a good baseball year  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 11:25 PM (#3344724)
Does Nobel have finalists, too, or is it "all in" in terms of winning - or nothing?


I think it's all in, at least as long as the public is concerned.
   6. NYCTigersfan  Posted: October 07, 2009 at 11:43 PM (#3344729)
Darn, at first I thought it was Venkatraman Ramakrishnan's son.
   7. Gonfalon Bubble  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 12:45 AM (#3344748)
Assuming genetic inheritance and an educationally nurturing environment explains most of IQ, I would not be surprised if Jon Steitz had the highest IQ in pro baseball history -- or at least among the Brew Crew. Not only did his father win the Nobel Prize, but his mother, Prof. Joan Steitz of Yale, is a world renowned molecular biologist and might herself win a Nobel Prize someday.

Half of Jon Steitz was 90% mental.
   8. Lassus  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 02:07 AM (#3344761)
I wonder what Gaelan thinks about this.
   9. Lassus  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 02:08 AM (#3344762)
double post
   10. snapper  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 06:45 AM (#3344783)
Man, if I had just won a Noble Prize I be pissed at being calle the "father of [a] former Brewer farm hand".

How about "Nobel prize winner Steitz has son who played in minors."
   11. VoodooR  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 07:12 AM (#3344795)
That's a pretty lackluster baseball career for the junior Steitz...
   12. Bob Dernier Cri  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 08:13 AM (#3344815)
Meanwhile Herta Müller has won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Her books are not in print in English AFAICT. No word on any offspring in organized baseball.
   13. Tom Nawrocki  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 08:41 AM (#3344835)
Somewhere this morning, Billy Jo Robidoux is calling up his father and saying, "And what have you ever done, Dad?"
   14. DL from MN  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 08:46 AM (#3344843)
Is he smarter than Craig Breslow?
   15. Zach  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:01 AM (#3344858)
As someone who edits physics textbooks (and has worked on chemistry textbooks), I always get a wee bit excited for this week, as I retain faint hopes some professor I've corresponded with wins a Nobel. It's never happened.

I was in grad school the year Jan Hall won it. It was pretty neat to see somebody that happy. He talked about
Beethoven and the shipborne chronometer and holding a newborn baby and told us to pursue our dreams and smell the flowers and remembered President Kennedy and thanked the shop guys three times. It was the greatest explanation of the femtosecond laser comb that I've ever heard.
   16. Van Lingle Mungo Jerry  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:22 AM (#3344871)
It was the greatest explanation of the femtosecond laser comb that I've ever heard.


How many have you heard?
   17. Campeones de la Serie Mundial('zop)  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:25 AM (#3344875)
Assuming genetic inheritance and an educationally nurturing environment explains most of IQ, I would not be surprised if Jon Steitz had the highest IQ in pro baseball history -- or at least among the Brew Crew. Not only did his father win the Nobel Prize, but his mother, Prof. Joan Steitz of Yale, is a world renowned molecular biologist and might herself win a Nobel Prize someday.

Not all Nobel Prize winners are super-intelligent. I worked fairly closely with a winner of the Crafoord Prize when I was in graduate school, which is the de facto Nobel for sciences that aren't covered by the Nobel.

He was smart enough, I guess. But his real gift was politics. He could raise money almost at will. He was a ferocious self-promoter. And he had an amazing ability to recognize up-and-coming-talent and convince them to work with him. He co-authored 100's of papers with more talented scientists...but if you get 40% of the credit for a paper and churn out 4 times as many papers as anyone else, all of a sudden you dominate your field. But he didn't really have a deep understanding of the science, he wasn't such a great mentor, and he was an awful, awful teacher.

There were plenty of well-recognized scientists that I worked with that were brilliant. But a guy that wins the really "publicity" oriented prize may just have a gift for.... publicity.
   18. Sean Forman  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:32 AM (#3344888)
I'm guessing that is the first doctorate from Ohio University to win a Nobel. Pretty cool for them.
   19. Bob Dernier Cri  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:35 AM (#3344890)
I was assuming I'd never met a Nobel Prize winner, but I remembered some stray associations. I have heard Seamus Heaney and Wole Soyinka give lectures. I saw Jimmy Carter wave to a crowd on Election Eve in 1976. For a year or two, office mailbox was right next to Toni Morrison's, but I never met her. And I met John Nash many times, though he was never lucid in those years. I guess I had always assumed, given Nash's case, that a brilliant result or discovery would bring acclaim in the sciences no matter what your networking skills, which in his case were nil. The Nobel in Literature, naturally, like the Peace Prize, is highly politicized.

There should be a Nobel Prize in Baseball. Earl Weaver should win the first one.
   20. Zach  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 09:40 AM (#3344897)
How many have you heard?

I have several friends who work with combs, so quite a few. But that's the only one where the guy lost his train of thought and burbled happily for ten minutes.

The physics Nobelists I've met are all pretty great guys. But the area of physics I work in was a sideline for a long time, so maybe the politicians sought out the sexier areas.
   21. ess eff  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:21 AM (#3344943)
Is he smarter than Craig Breslow?


Steitz and Breslow were teammates at Yale, along with Matt McCarthy, who writes about both of them in "Odd Man Out."

McCarthy worked in Prof. Steitz's lab at Yale.

EDIT: And McCarthy says Jon Steitz had a perfect SAT II score.
   22. Superunknown Gary Geiger Counter  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:25 AM (#3344947)
I wonder what Gaelan thinks about this.


??
   23. Tropical Storm Davis aka Quilvio "Ebola" Veras  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:30 AM (#3344952)
Who is the codebreaking spy who played earlier this century--Max Berg?
   24. ess eff  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:32 AM (#3344956)
Moe Berg? If so, not this century.
   25. Tropical Storm Davis aka Quilvio "Ebola" Veras  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:32 AM (#3344957)
   26. ess eff  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:39 AM (#3344959)
It was Moe Berg


Note, in that link to all things catcher, the seventh item from the top. Ya got your chest protector, your mask, your shinguards, your catcher bio, your Salinger . . .
   27. Superunknown Gary Geiger Counter  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:54 AM (#3344968)
Weirdsville:


Newsblog: Father of former Brewer farmhand wins Nobel Prize‏
(26 - 11:39am, Oct 08)
Last: ess eff
   28. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 10:59 AM (#3344973)
I don't get it, GGC.
   29. Superunknown Gary Geiger Counter  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 11:03 AM (#3344978)
The coding is screwed up or something. The number of posts is in the middle of the time and there are two closed parens,
   30. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 11:34 AM (#3345011)
What I see is on the sidebar and in your post is:
(26 11:39amOct 08)

or
left paren, # of posts, hyphen, time, comma, date, right paren
which is what I always see.
   31. ess eff  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 11:47 AM (#3345019)
I also see the screwed-up version under hot topics. Time first and then # of posts, unlike everything else showing in hot topics.

Under the Law of Ess Eff, I no doubt did something to cause this, and if I knew what it was, I'd fix it.
   32. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 12:03 PM (#3345045)
do you see that with other topics? is it a browser issue (i'm in ie right now)?
   33. battlekow  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 12:09 PM (#3345058)
Yeah, the format in the Hot Topics for this thread has been screwed up for me since it was posted last night; I'm running OS 10.6.1 and Firefox 3.5.3.
   34. Gonfalon Bubble  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 12:20 PM (#3345071)
Who is the codebreaking spy who played earlier this century--Max Berg?

It was Moe Berg


Dave Berg successfully cracked the meaning behind the dots and dashes on every "Spy vs. Spy."
   35. Rich Rifkin  Posted: October 08, 2009 at 06:39 PM (#3345462)
Peter Berg, son of Larry Berg, no relation to Moe Berg or St. Petersburg, directed the recent ESPN movie about the trade of Wayne Gretzky, as well as the high school football movie Friday Night Lights, but did not direct the movie about the ice berg.
   36. Monty  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 11:48 AM (#3346406)
The Nobel in Literature, naturally, like the Peace Prize, is highly politicized.


In retrospect, this is my favorite post of the week.
   37. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 11:55 AM (#3346423)
I can see why.
I like the Nobel Prize in baseball idea, btw - and imagine it would look something like the requilary.
   38. Rich Rifkin  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 01:33 PM (#3346543)
I liked Barack Obama's reaction to the text message he got when the Swede's told him he had won the Nobel Peace Prize:
WTF?
At least it was based on his having accomplished nothing so far and not on his having invented an autobiography, as told in Salon.com:
(Rigoberta) Menchú's account of her family's situation is also distorted. She had no brother who starved to death, at least none that her own family could remember. The ladinos were not a ruling caste in her town or district, in which there were no large estates as she claims. The Menchús, moreover, were not poor in the way Rigoberta describes them. Vicente Menchú had title to 2,753 hectares of land. The 22-year land dispute described by Rigoberta, which is the central event in the book leading to the rebellion, in fact concerned a tiny 151-hectare parcel of land. Moreover, his "heroic struggle against the landowners who wanted to take our land" was in fact not a dispute with representatives of a European-descended conquistador class but with his own Mayan relatives, the Tum family, headed by his wife's uncle.

Vicente Menchú did not organize a peasant resistance called Committee for Campesino Unity. He was a conservative, insofar as he was political at all. His consuming passion was not any social concern, but the family feud with his in-laws, who were small landowning peasants like himself.
It is bizarre how prestigious the science awards for the Nobel Prize are, while the Peace Prize has been terribly demeaned by the idiots in Scandanavia who pick a winner out of a hat every year.

If I had any say in who should have won it, I think a good case could be made at this point for giving the prize to Col. Sean MacFarland, the American officer in Iraq who convinced Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, a regional Sunni chieftan, to make peace with the U.S. and to help fight Al-Qaeda in Iraq, in exchange for the Americans protecting the Sunnis from Shiite terrorists. That move by MacFarland led to the Sunni Awakening, which ultimately created the semi-peace which exists in Iraq today. Had Al-Qaeda not successfully murdered Abu Risha, he would be a great candidate to share the award with MacFarland.
   39. Shooty Did Not Kill McGurk  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 01:49 PM (#3346563)
I liked Barack Obama's reaction to the text message he got when the Swede's told him he had won the Nobel Peace Prize:

WTF?


I think it's kinda fun Obama was as surprised as anyone by the award. I spoke with my mom this morning and, though we're both big Obama supporters, we both think it's kinda (to put it mildy) premature. I'm taking it as one last #### YOU to W. from the Swedes.
   40. Ron Johnson  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 01:52 PM (#3346568)
Shooty, you've just picked up your own personal #### YOU from the Norwegians.

Though apparently there are plenty of Norwegians who are going WTF? too.
   41. Shooty Did Not Kill McGurk  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 01:55 PM (#3346573)
Shooty, you've just picked up your own personal #### YOU from the Norwegians.

What'd I do to the Norwegians? Is it because I'm a quarter Swede? That's racist!
   42. Best Regards, Larry Mahnken  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 01:55 PM (#3346574)
It's better than Al Gore, who certainly deserved to be awarded for using his political influence to help mankind, but I don't think promoting awareness of Global Warming has or will do much to promote peace.
   43. robinred  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:02 PM (#3346581)
What'd I do to the Norwegians


They're pissed because you only hook your mom up with Canadians.
   44. Shooty Did Not Kill McGurk  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:06 PM (#3346590)
They're pissed because you only hook your mom up with Canadians.

Mom doesn't like the smell of herring. I keep telling them, taking a ####### bath you dirty walrus people!, but do they listen? Nope. It's all just yumpin yoompin yompin. Bunch of jerks.
   45. Ryan Jones  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:10 PM (#3346597)
Mom doesn't like the smell of herring.

No she doesn't. But the smell of maple syrup and seal blood really gets her engine going.
   46. Shooty Did Not Kill McGurk  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:23 PM (#3346616)
No she doesn't. But the smell of maple syrup and seal blood really gets her engine going.

Mom's a mystery.
   47. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:25 PM (#3346619)
Whereas I'm a quarter Norwegian, Shooty. It's on ############.
   48. Ryan Jones  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:31 PM (#3346627)
Whereas I'm a quarter Norwegian, Shooty. It's on ############.


I'd be careful if I were you. Shooty is well aware of your weakness - a line drive to the nether regions.
   49. Andere Richtingen  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:32 PM (#3346629)
I don't think promoting awareness of Global Warming has or will do much to promote peace.

Seriously? Rapid climate change ----> Agricultural disasters -----> Socioeconomic unrest -----> War.

Gore getting the NPP of course can be reasonably questioned, but I think something like having an impact on global warming is extremely relevant. Norman Borlaug would be another example.
   50. Shooty Did Not Kill McGurk  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:35 PM (#3346631)
Whereas I'm a quarter Norwegian, Shooty. It's on ############.

I'll just wait for some German bruiser to bang on you for a while and then I'll go play Jenga or something.



Too soon?
   51. Der Komminsk-sar  Posted: October 09, 2009 at 02:37 PM (#3346632)
It's never too soon. For Jenga!
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