No, I have a problem with misrepresenting what was an AMERICAN success, in AMERICA at AMERICAN Universities as an israeli success.
Why would someone do that?
Now now, stop lying, they were born and raised in Israel, and even attended Technion, one of the best universities in the world.
Arieh Warshel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born in 1940 in kibbutz Sde Nahum. Served in the Israeli Armored Corps. After serving the Israeli Army (final rank Captain), Warshel attended the Technion, Haifa, where he received his BSc degree in Chemistry, Summa Cum Laude, in 1966. Subsequently, he earned both MSc and PhD degrees in Chemical Physics (in 1967 and 1969, respectively), with Shneior Lifson, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. After his PhD, he did postdoctoral work at Harvard University, from 1972 to 1976 he returned to the Weizmann Institute and worked for the Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, England. In 1976 he joined the faculty of the Department of Chemistry at USC. He was awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Michael Levitt
In 1967, Levitt, worked at the Weizmann Institute of Science, with Professor Shneior Lifson and a student of his - Arieh Warshel, of the Technion in Haifa. They were using computer modelling to understand the behaviour of biological molecules.[17]
Martin Karplus
Karplus was a child when his family fled from the Nazi-occupation in Austria. Prior to their immigration to the United States, the family was known for being "an intellectual and successful secular Jewish family" in Vienna.[3] Already his grandfather, Johann Paul Karplus (1866-1936) was a highly acclaimed professor of psychiatry at the University of Vienna.[4] He is nephew of the famous sociologist, philosopher and musicologist Theodor W. Adorno. His brother, Robert Karplus, was an internationally recognised physicist and educator at University of California, Berkeley.
Jews batting three for three!