Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by yunglivochi(m): 1:01am On Jan 07, 2016 |
wonderful thread op
i've bin educated |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Chicagoesontop: 1:09am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy: One thing we've always been agitiating for in this section is the ladies.
I know, there are no desirable men here. we're all scrawny nerds, but still . . .
I've always Admired female scientists . . . even before i became a main stream scientist, all my crushes were scientists . . . they were also dead people, so . . . i never got to express my feelings . . . thanks. so I thought to share my crush collection to you guys, right? because that's totally normal. so, here, I present to you, my crushes in this world, Seven of my most favorite female scientists, The list of the most interesting women in the world.
Emmy Noether [img]http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/noether.jpg[/img] Hmmmn . . . nice curves . . . sorry, i mean, Emmy Noether was a female Jewish German scientist. she was both a mathematician and theoretical physicist. She was actually one of the leading mathematicians of her time! She has a theorem called Noether theorem that explains the relationship between symmetry and conservation laws. and hey, Albert Einstein, pavel Alexandrov , and hermann weyl referred to her as THE most important woman in the entire history of mathematics. not to mention her cur . . . sorry, contributions to physics. abstract algebra, topology and mathematical rings.
Grace Hopper
Okay fine . . . maybe she isn't that good looking . . . to shallow guys. so this lady right here, is just too amazing. she was both a soldier AND a scientist. she is often referred to as amazing grace. she, invented the first complier, invented the word, debugging, contributed to the development of one of the first high level programming languages, she was a navy rear admiral . . . she was one of the first programmers of the havard mark I computer, she was one of the developers of UNIVAC . . . can i hear a slow clap from there?
Ada Lovelace [img]http://2.bp..com/-ZA6yTXr7mI0/UMYHMnvnD_I/AAAAAAAACoI/j3-Txr0MRZo/s1600/Google-Doodle197thBdayAdaLovelacePortrt.jpg[/img]
What attracts so many women to computing? anyway, Ada lovelace, the curvy goddess of computer science, is the first programmer in the world. that's right, you guys in the programming section . . . a lady beat you to it. sorry. so, she died at the age of 36, a minute silence . . . she was a British mathematician, who is, not only the first person to program, but the first person to design an algorithm. because she's just that cool. she was a countess, and she was also the first person to realize that the power of computers was more than just calculations. she envisioned that they could eventually be used for doing things that can be broken down logically. just like your computer can now play videos. instead of just doing calculations.
marie curie
If you don't Already know this woman, then . . . where have you been? come on! anyway, she was polish . . . and, you know, became french . . . concerning the nobel prize, she is the only woman to win twice, the first person to win twice, and the only person to win twice in multiple sciences(take that . . . Albert . . . ) she died at 66, which is generally a good age, i guess. i mean, come on, you know when Blaise pascal died? even without radio activity. so, she coined the term, radioactivity, she Isolated two elements, polonium and radium, and she also dabbled into medicine as well, figuring out, miraculously, no doubt, how to use radioactivity to treat certain illnesses! she became the director of the red cross radiology service, and went Florence nightingale on everyone. her contributions will never be forgotten at all in the history of science. (wipes tears. )
Irene Joliot curie [img]http://saintssistersandsluts.files./2012/08/irc3a8ne_joliot-curie_1897-1956_c-_1935.jpg[/img]
Notice something? yeah me too. she is the daughter of marie curie. yeah. so . . . she is also a nobel prize winner. and she also worked on radioactivity. and Oh, she shared the prize with her husband. anyway, her mother got the prize for natural radioactivity, and she got the prize for artificial radioactivity. i know, right? i told you the list contains the most interesting women in the world, didn't I? . and her daughter is also a very prominent scientist. talk about strong genes. unfortunately, she also got killed by radiation . . . (fine, robinhez may have a point. ) but who cares, right? she's still a gem in the field of science.
Alice Ball
A minute silence for our blood sister here. yup, she is a black lady. and she died at the age of 24. so young. so painful. and she has only one picture to her credit. who knows what she might have accomplished if she'd lived longer. just at that young age, she already had a masters degree. and, she developed a treatment for leprosy for more than twenty years. what's really interesting about her is what more she could have done. imagine if Einstein had died at 24.
Sofia Kovalevskaya [img]http://cdn.ruvr.ru/2011/08/10/1252589782/Sofja_Wassiljewna_Kowalewskaja_1.jpg[/img]
Russians and their impossible to pronounce names . . . smh . . . anyway, this lady right here, is my most recently discovered female scientist. And she didn't disappoint at all. she made several significant contributions to analysis(calculus is a subset of this.) partial differential equations, and mechanics. she was the first female professor in Russia, she also introduced the Cauchy-Kovalevskaya theorem. not that hard to grasp if you're good in math, i guess. here, take a look. [url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy%E2%80%93Kovalevskaya_theorem[/url]
So, i guess my point is, what a man can do . . . a woman can equally do. . and we have always learned in science that anytime a woman is involved, something entirely dynamic changes science. and we really DO want more women to come and contribute. because they really can. and whenever they do, they become one of the most interesting women in the world.
Cheers.
Lalasticlala, dominique, Robinhez, johnydon22 and his freecocoa, dekatron, Xploraben, Sirwere, freemanan, Llaykorn, Mathschic . . . and other interesting people of the world . . . I was hoping that those Currie people will be the ones who invented the Currie seasoning that people are using to cook food nowadays !! |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by gatoyi: 1:23am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Finally - a comment that makes sense. Given the sorts of politicians and preachers we've been blessed with, it's safe to say that intelligence, logic etc are often not the key determinants of dominance in one field over another: opportunity and prejudice often are. As for all these blabbermouth men complaining about women (as if they have no part in our gender roles play ou) - hope you're also equal participants in homemaking. shepherd77:
So which field is not skewed against women?
Politics - men, sports - men, literature - men, arts - men, military - men, religion - men, you name it.
I don't believe reasoning and Logic is the cause. 1 Like |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by BobUg28(m): 1:36am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Nice one op, I was looking forward to see the woman who invented CCTV and surveillance camera. She is indeed a creative woman. The one I envisions so much. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by ucheosinachi: 2:25am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Nice one. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by akigbemaru: 2:33am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Women in science. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by mamagee3(f): 2:59am On Jan 07, 2016 |
lasisi69: Ada mbano invented otu ocha You're crazy! |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by ashjay001(m): 3:12am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy:
See, i get your point. and I totally understand. however, i must state mine. Fact does not equal possibility. they CAN do it. in fact, it's more interesting when a lady is in science because it shows how brave she is. i wouldn't advice any lady to shy away from these fields. beyond the awards, science trains the mind to think. something that is helpful later in life. and one can never envisage the potential of someone who won't give up. and I really think that is the better point.
They should see it as a challenge. something to achieve. not as a barrier, or a proof that they can never achieve anything in life.
In the same realm, absolutely no blacks have actually been awarded a Nobel prize in science. does that make the whites better than us? probably yes . . . but does that make them perpetually better? D few women who can actually think logically, are generally outstanding in whatever field of endeavour. U cant wish or encourage pple to think logically, u either have it or not. As outstanding as their mental capabilities n multi-tasking capacities, most ladies inability to reason logically is one good reason they don't attain their potentials. I knew a lot of brilliant ladies in pry n secondary who are no where to b found today! 1 Like |
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Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by AreaFada2: 4:06am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy: One thing we've always been agitiating for in this section is the ladies.
I know, there are no desirable men here. we're all scrawny nerds, but still . . .
I've always Admired female scientists . . . even before i became a main stream scientist, all my crushes were scientists . . . they were also dead people, so . . . i never got to express my feelings . . . thanks. so I thought to share my crush collection to you guys, right? because that's totally normal. so, here, I present to you, my crushes in this world, Seven of my most favorite female scientists, The list of the most interesting women in the world.
Emmy Noether [img]http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/noether.jpg[/img] Hmmmn . . . nice curves . . . sorry, i mean, Emmy Noether was a female Jewish German scientist. she was both a mathematician and theoretical physicist. She was actually one of the leading mathematicians of her time! She has a theorem called Noether theorem that explains the relationship between symmetry and conservation laws. and hey, Albert Einstein, pavel Alexandrov , and hermann weyl referred to her as THE most important woman in the entire history of mathematics. not to mention her cur . . . sorry, contributions to physics. abstract algebra, topology and mathematical rings.
Grace Hopper
Okay fine . . . maybe she isn't that good looking . . . to shallow guys. so this lady right here, is just too amazing. she was both a soldier AND a scientist. she is often referred to as amazing grace. she, invented the first complier, invented the word, debugging, contributed to the development of one of the first high level programming languages, she was a navy rear admiral . . . she was one of the first programmers of the havard mark I computer, she was one of the developers of UNIVAC . . . can i hear a slow clap from there?
Ada Lovelace [img]http://2.bp..com/-ZA6yTXr7mI0/UMYHMnvnD_I/AAAAAAAACoI/j3-Txr0MRZo/s1600/Google-Doodle197thBdayAdaLovelacePortrt.jpg[/img]
What attracts so many women to computing? anyway, Ada lovelace, the curvy goddess of computer science, is the first programmer in the world. that's right, you guys in the programming section . . . a lady beat you to it. sorry. so, she died at the age of 36, a minute silence . . . she was a British mathematician, who is, not only the first person to program, but the first person to design an algorithm. because she's just that cool. she was a countess, and she was also the first person to realize that the power of computers was more than just calculations. she envisioned that they could eventually be used for doing things that can be broken down logically. just like your computer can now play videos. instead of just doing calculations.
marie curie
If you don't Already know this woman, then . . . where have you been? come on! anyway, she was polish . . . and, you know, became french . . . concerning the nobel prize, she is the only woman to win twice, the first person to win twice, and the only person to win twice in multiple sciences(take that . . . Albert . . . ) she died at 66, which is generally a good age, i guess. i mean, come on, you know when Blaise pascal died? even without radio activity. so, she coined the term, radioactivity, she Isolated two elements, polonium and radium, and she also dabbled into medicine as well, figuring out, miraculously, no doubt, how to use radioactivity to treat certain illnesses! she became the director of the red cross radiology service, and went Florence nightingale on everyone. her contributions will never be forgotten at all in the history of science. (wipes tears. )
Irene Joliot curie [img]http://saintssistersandsluts.files./2012/08/irc3a8ne_joliot-curie_1897-1956_c-_1935.jpg[/img]
Notice something? yeah me too. she is the daughter of marie curie. yeah. so . . . she is also a nobel prize winner. and she also worked on radioactivity. and Oh, she shared the prize with her husband. anyway, her mother got the prize for natural radioactivity, and she got the prize for artificial radioactivity. i know, right? i told you the list contains the most interesting women in the world, didn't I? . and her daughter is also a very prominent scientist. talk about strong genes. unfortunately, she also got killed by radiation . . . (fine, robinhez may have a point. ) but who cares, right? she's still a gem in the field of science.
Alice Ball
A minute silence for our blood sister here. yup, she is a black lady. and she died at the age of 24. so young. so painful. and she has only one picture to her credit. who knows what she might have accomplished if she'd lived longer. just at that young age, she already had a masters degree. and, she developed a treatment for leprosy for more than twenty years. what's really interesting about her is what more she could have done. imagine if Einstein had died at 24.
Sofia Kovalevskaya [img]http://cdn.ruvr.ru/2011/08/10/1252589782/Sofja_Wassiljewna_Kowalewskaja_1.jpg[/img]
Russians and their impossible to pronounce names . . . smh . . . anyway, this lady right here, is my most recently discovered female scientist. And she didn't disappoint at all. she made several significant contributions to analysis(calculus is a subset of this.) partial differential equations, and mechanics. she was the first female professor in Russia, she also introduced the Cauchy-Kovalevskaya theorem. not that hard to grasp if you're good in math, i guess. here, take a look. [url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy%E2%80%93Kovalevskaya_theorem[/url]
So, i guess my point is, what a man can do . . . a woman can equally do. . and we have always learned in science that anytime a woman is involved, something entirely dynamic changes science. and we really DO want more women to come and contribute. because they really can. and whenever they do, they become one of the most interesting women in the world.
Cheers.
1962
Lalasticlala, dominique, Robinhez, johnydon22 and his freecocoa, dekatron, Xploraben, Sirwere, freemanan, Llaykorn, Mathschic . . . and other interesting people of the world . . . Rosalind Elsie Franklin should be here. Her work on X-ray Crystallography & virus led to her taking Photo 51. It showed the double helix of DNA structure. Our understanding of DNA, genetics and related biotech & medical uses were made possible. She died in 1958, aged 37. From abdominal/ovarian cancer, possibly from too much X-ray exposure. Her colleagues (Crick, Watson & Wilkins) who worked on DNA with her won Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology in 1962. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalind_Franklin 1 Like |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Nobody: 4:24am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy did Alice Ball die from leprosy? Altho I can just look it up I suppose I would encourage young girls to become scientists but that would be slight hypocrisy because I am a young girl and I wouldn't wanna be a scientist Altho being an engineer, doctor, etc, one can still leave the actual practicing side of your profession and look into the theory and study more. Just that it doesn't pay as well. And money must be made |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by drhabeeb99: 5:33am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Professor Olanrewaju Adigun Fagbohun has been
appointed the 8th substantive Vice-Chancellor of
the Lagos State University (LASU).
This was contained in a statement signed on
Wednesday by the State’s Commissioner for
Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde.
Professor Olanrewaju Adigun Fagbohun studied
Law at the University of Ife (now Obafemi
Awolowo University) and obtained his Master’s of
Law Degree from the University of Lagos and
doctoral degree from Obafemi Awolowo
University.
He joined the Faculty of Law of the Lagos State
University (LASU) as an Assistant Lecturer in
January 1991 and rose through the ranks to an
associate professor in 2014.
Before his appointment, he served as a member
of Senate of the Lagos State University; Head of
Department of Business Law and later
Department of Private and Property Law;
Coordinator, Law Centre; Coordinator of the
Department of Environmental Law and Allied
Disciplines of the Centre for Environment and
Science Education of the Lagos State University,
and was, for several years, the Editor-in-Chief of
the LASU Law Journal. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by 1miccza: 5:46am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Sheikwonder:
By all means then,let's tell the ladies they can do it...let's tell them that "what a man can do,a woman can do better"...let's not tell them that in its over 100 years of inception and with 870 winners,the Nobel prize has only been awarded 49 times to women.
I understand your need to encourage the women folk,but please remind them that it's a tough field out there.As someone here rightly pointed out,most of the women on your list are dead and have been so for a very long time!
I'm sorry if I come off as a bit chauvinistic but the facts are axiomatic.... Even if you do have a point i strongly believe if someone did it,others can do it tooi.Irrespective of their gender and the inherent challenges. These women also had their challenges and they pushed through.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by 1miccza: 5:50am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy:
See, i get your point. and I totally understand. however, i must state mine. Fact does not equal possibility. they CAN do it. in fact, it's more interesting when a lady is in science because it shows how brave she is. i wouldn't advice any lady to shy away from these fields. beyond the awards, science trains the mind to think. something that is helpful later in life. and one can never envisage the potential of someone who won't give up. and I really think that is the better point.
They should see it as a challenge. something to achieve. not as a barrier, or a proof that they can never achieve anything in life.
In the same realm, absolutely no blacks have actually been awarded a Nobel prize in science. does that make the whites better than us? probably yes . . . but does that make them perpetually better? On Blacks not making it there's a black Lady on that list but i'll tell you that there are seriously strong black Female scientists with loads of Inventions. Their not being named might or can be attributed to poverty.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by 1miccza: 5:53am On Jan 07, 2016 |
|
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by 1miccza: 5:55am On Jan 07, 2016 |
KanwuliaJara:
Errrrrm. . .
Nwayor-nwayor biko nna!
I nefa reach dat kain status o!!!!
Haba!!!!!
Hahahahahahaa "Afraid" catsh Aunty straight ooo |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by LOVEGINO(m): 5:55am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Teempakguy: One thing we've always been agitiating for in this section is the ladies.
I know, there are no desirable men here. we're all scrawny nerds, but still . . .
I've always Admired female scientists . . . even before i became a main stream scientist, all my crushes were scientists . . . they were also dead people, so . . . i never got to express my feelings . . . thanks. so I thought to share my crush collection to you guys, right? because that's totally normal. so, here, I present to you, my crushes in this world, Seven of my most favorite female scientists, The list of the most interesting women in the world.
Emmy Noether [img]http://www.agnesscott.edu/lriddle/women/noether.jpg[/img] Hmmmn . . . nice curves . . . sorry, i mean, Emmy Noether was a female Jewish German scientist. she was both a mathematician and theoretical physicist. She was actually one of the leading mathematicians of her time! She has a theorem called Noether theorem that explains the relationship between symmetry and conservation laws. and hey, Albert Einstein, pavel Alexandrov , and hermann weyl referred to her as THE most important woman in the entire history of mathematics. not to mention her cur . . . sorry, contributions to physics. abstract algebra, topology and mathematical rings.
Grace Hopper
Okay fine . . . maybe she isn't that good looking . . . to shallow guys. so this lady right here, is just too amazing. she was both a soldier AND a scientist. she is often referred to as amazing grace. she, invented the first complier, invented the word, debugging, contributed to the development of one of the first high level programming languages, she was a navy rear admiral . . . she was one of the first programmers of the havard mark I computer, she was one of the developers of UNIVAC . . . can i hear a slow clap from there?
Ada Lovelace [img]http://2.bp..com/-ZA6yTXr7mI0/UMYHMnvnD_I/AAAAAAAACoI/j3-Txr0MRZo/s1600/Google-Doodle197thBdayAdaLovelacePortrt.jpg[/img]
What attracts so many women to computing? anyway, Ada lovelace, the curvy goddess of computer science, is the first programmer in the world. that's right, you guys in the programming section . . . a lady beat you to it. sorry. so, she died at the age of 36, a minute silence . . . she was a British mathematician, who is, not only the first person to program, but the first person to design an algorithm. because she's just that cool. she was a countess, and she was also the first person to realize that the power of computers was more than just calculations. she envisioned that they could eventually be used for doing things that can be broken down logically. just like your computer can now play videos. instead of just doing calculations.
marie curie
If you don't Already know this woman, then . . . where have you been? come on! anyway, she was polish . . . and, you know, became french . . . concerning the nobel prize, she is the only woman to win twice, the first person to win twice, and the only person to win twice in multiple sciences(take that . . . Albert . . . ) she died at 66, which is generally a good age, i guess. i mean, come on, you know when Blaise pascal died? even without radio activity. so, she coined the term, radioactivity, she Isolated two elements, polonium and radium, and she also dabbled into medicine as well, figuring out, miraculously, no doubt, how to use radioactivity to treat certain illnesses! she became the director of the red cross radiology service, and went Florence nightingale on everyone. her contributions will never be forgotten at all in the history of science. (wipes tears. )
Irene Joliot curie [img]http://saintssistersandsluts.files./2012/08/irc3a8ne_joliot-curie_1897-1956_c-_1935.jpg[/img]
Notice something? yeah me too. she is the daughter of marie curie. yeah. so . . . she is also a nobel prize winner. and she also worked on radioactivity. and Oh, she shared the prize with her husband. anyway, her mother got the prize for natural radioactivity, and she got the prize for artificial radioactivity. i know, right? i told you the list contains the most interesting women in the world, didn't I? . and her daughter is also a very prominent scientist. talk about strong genes. unfortunately, she also got killed by radiation . . . (fine, robinhez may have a point. ) but who cares, right? she's still a gem in the field of science.
Alice Ball
A minute silence for our blood sister here. yup, she is a black lady. and she died at the age of 24. so young. so painful. and she has only one picture to her credit. who knows what she might have accomplished if she'd lived longer. just at that young age, she already had a masters degree. and, she developed a treatment for leprosy for more than twenty years. what's really interesting about her is what more she could have done. imagine if Einstein had died at 24.
Sofia Kovalevskaya [img]http://cdn.ruvr.ru/2011/08/10/1252589782/Sofja_Wassiljewna_Kowalewskaja_1.jpg[/img]
Russians and their impossible to pronounce names . . . smh . . . anyway, this lady right here, is my most recently discovered female scientist. And she didn't disappoint at all. she made several significant contributions to analysis(calculus is a subset of this.) partial differential equations, and mechanics. she was the first female professor in Russia, she also introduced the Cauchy-Kovalevskaya theorem. not that hard to grasp if you're good in math, i guess. here, take a look. [url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cauchy%E2%80%93Kovalevskaya_theorem[/url]
So, i guess my point is, what a man can do . . . a woman can equally do. . and we have always learned in science that anytime a woman is involved, something entirely dynamic changes science. and we really DO want more women to come and contribute. because they really can. and whenever they do, they become one of the most interesting women in the world.
Cheers.
Lalasticlala, dominique, Robinhez, johnydon22 and his freecocoa, dekatron, Xploraben, Sirwere, freemanan, Llaykorn, Mathschic . . . and other interesting people of the world . . . Cossy Orjiakor 1 Like |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by mrwonlasewonie: 6:07am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Freemanan: My apologies my intellectual colleague but I have to deviate a bit...
THE FACT THAT NO AFRICAN WOMAN COMES TO MIND IN THIS SUBJECT SPEAKS VOLUME.
IT FURTHER BUTTRESS THE FACT THAT THE PLACE OF THE WOMEN ARE IN THE CITADEL OF TRIVIAL AND EMOTIONAL CUM CULINARY FIELDS.
THIS HAS TO CHANGE...
IHATAGO?? sharap your dirty stinking mouth. you no see Alice ball there |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by mrphysics(m): 6:38am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Raplinx:
Where have i been all this while i feel left out. I'm gon be following y'all NL SCIENTISTS. mrphysics, can i get ur Facebook username or Email, pls wana chat with u on Physics. i've just gotten an Admssion in FUTO to study it as my 1st choice course. Thanks. PM me. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by jbichene(m): 6:53am On Jan 07, 2016 |
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Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Nobody: 6:59am On Jan 07, 2016 |
mrwonlasewonie: sharap your dirty stinking mouth. you no see Alice ball there She got African root. Dazall... Good morning. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Raplinx(m): 6:59am On Jan 07, 2016 |
mrphysics:
PM me. this Site dont allow chat, whats ur êmail thên? |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Krystalzkris(f): 7:06am On Jan 07, 2016 |
anigold:
abeg are u from moscow,Russia. abeg how do u pronounced this your user name.. I think if I can pronounce it I will be due for a noble prize... lmao.. oya come for tutorial na |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Krystalzkris(f): 7:11am On Jan 07, 2016 |
jbichene: physics always attracts the brightest minds ,therefore leaving biology in the shadows ,secondly biology is mostly about observation,so most of their discoveries do not attract attention,on the other hand fields in physics such as Astro physics require strong thinkers to make break through because of how different their concepts are from our every day observations back here on earth ,so each break through attracts alot of attention. i dont think so.. Biological discoveries aint all about observation and its not as easy as you think... Op just loves physics.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by leonard509(m): 7:21am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Freemanan: My apologies my intellectual colleague but I have to deviate a bit...
THE FACT THAT NO AFRICAN WOMAN COMES TO MIND IN THIS SUBJECT SPEAKS VOLUME.
IT FURTHER BUTTRESS THE FACT THAT THE PLACE OF THE WOMEN ARE IN THE CITADEL OF TRIVIAL AND EMOTIONAL CUM CULINARY FIELDS.
THIS HAS TO CHANGE...
IHATAGO?? true ma nigga... |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by anigold(m): 7:29am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Krystalzkris: lmao.. oya come for tutorial na where is the venue for the tutorial. your house? well I need to where helmet in case someone tries to break my head.. u know what I mean.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by anigold(m): 7:30am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Krystalzkris: lmao.. oya come for tutorial na where is the venue for the tutorial. your house? well I need to wear helmet in case someone tries to break my head.. u know what I mean.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Booyakasha(f): 7:33am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Nice thread teempakguy, i wonder why you still post quality posts on nairaland first... well lets just think you forgot your site... i hope you repair your tools soon i.e your soaked/wet laptop and phone.. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by mrphysics(m): 8:07am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Raplinx: this Site dont allow chat, whats ur êmail thên? I sent you a mail, check your mail sir |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Rexyl(m): 8:13am On Jan 07, 2016 |
over Nigerian women to invent something special in science and technology. |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Eljay24(m): 8:25am On Jan 07, 2016 |
Nice one Op |
Re: Some Interesting Female Scientists (Photos) by Eljay24(m): 8:25am On Jan 07, 2016 |
See "Ada -obi" wey we go school together she don enter History sha* . .. I need to invent something this 2016. |