🚨Explosif! Intégralité de l’intervention d’Ousmane Sonko ce soir (en français). Le linge sale se lave en public. J’avais dit ooo! Et ce n’est pas terminé: l’ère de la cohabitation dur a commencé!
Jennifer Doudna grew up in a small town in Hawaii, surrounded by nature. As a child she was fascinated by the evolution of native plants and animals that thrived in that unique ecosystem. Although she didn't yet understand DNA, her curiosity about the chemistry of living systems ultimately led her to pursue a career in chemistry.
Read about how her scientific journey began: https://t.co/jiqh5j1u83
"If you're not failing, you're not pushing boundaries."
Hear medicine laureate Elizabeth Blackburn speak about the valuable lessons we can learn from failure.
Sinner Masters the set 🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
@janniksin becomes the second man in series history to complete the set of titles at all 9 ATP Masters 1000 events, joining Djokovic.
@InteBNLdItalia | #IBI26
On this day in 1994, Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first black president of South Africa, marking the official end of apartheid.
Listen to his message – just as relevant now as it was more than thirty years ago – calling all the peoples of the world to "fight racism wherever it occurs and whatever guise it assumes."
Learn more: https://t.co/ihuxmqXQcv
“To be successful as a scientist, I think you really need to be curious. You need to be inquisitive. You want to know answers to stuff that you don’t have a good sense on. You have to be stubborn because you’re going to be wrong and you’re going to not get through this. You have to have a long-term perspective. You can go months, years, sometimes making painfully little progress on something – and then something happens and it’s exciting. But if you need immediate gratification, you should not be a scientist. That’s not going to work for you, because there’s very little immediate gratification in this business. You’ve got to be stubborn and you’ve got to have a long-term perspective.”
Some career advice from 2025 medicine laureate Fred Ramsdell. He shared the prize with Mary Brunkow and Shimon Sakaguichi for their “discoveries concerning peripheral immune tolerance.”