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Mitchison and Rosalind
and Mitchison, Rosalind, eds.
* Mitchison, Rosalind, A History of Scotland.
* Rosalind Mitchison, " Sinclair, Sir John, first baronet ( 1754 – 1835 )", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 16 July 2005.

Mitchison and .
Other writers that emerged in this period, and are often treated as part of the movement, include the poets Edwin Muir and William Soutar, the novelists Neil Gunn, George Blake, Nan Shepherd, A J Cronin, Naomi Mitchison, Eric Linklater and Lewis Grassic Gibbon, and the playwright James Bridie.
Sigmund Freud, James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, D. H. Lawrence, Aleister Crowley, Ezra Pound, William Gaddis, Mary Renault, Joseph Campbell, Roger Zelazny, Naomi Mitchison ( in her The Corn King and the Spring Queen ), and Camille Paglia, are some of the authors deeply influenced by The Golden Bough.
Fictional accounts of her life are given in the 1928 novel Anna Comnena by Naomi Mitchison, and the 1999 novel for young people Anna of Byzantium by Tracy Barrett.
After the publication in The Times of a letter of support for the exhibition, asking that something from the show be purchased for the national collection ( signed by, among others, Stephen Spender, W. H. Auden, Geoffrey Grigson, Rebecca West, Naomi Mitchison, Henry Moore and Eric Gill ) the Tate Gallery bought the painting, Red Scene.
At the 1945 election Profumo was defeated at Kettering by a Labour candidate, Dick Mitchison.
The dynamic lengthening and shortening of spindle microtubules ( Mitchison and Kirschner 1984 ) determines to a large extent the shape of the mitotic spindle and promotes the proper alignment of chromosomes at the spindle midzone.
Other writers that emerged in this period, and are often treated as part of the movement, include the poets Edwin Muir and William Soutar, the novelists Neil Gunn, George Blake, Nan Shepherd, A J Cronin, Naomi Mitchison, Eric Linklater and Lewis Grassic Gibbon, and the playwright James Bridie.
It was first developed as an experimental model in the 1950s: by Urs Leupold for studying genetics, and by Murdoch Mitchison for studying the cell cycle.
The Wartime Diary of Naomi Mitchison ed.
* Mitchison, N. ( 1982 ) Margaret Cole, 1893-1980 ISBN 0-7163-0482-1
* H. B. Barlow, T. P. Kaushal, and G. J. Mitchison.
The only person known to be outside on the lunar surface at the time of the attempt is Naomi Mitchison, a tourist and old flame of Gil's.

Rosalind and .
After trouble with an incompetent Swiss French nursery helper Marcelle for toddler Rosalind, she decides " Scottish preferred .. good with the young.
The French were hopeless disciplinarians .. Germans good and methodical, but it was not German that I really wanted Rosalind to learn.
In the 1950s, James D. Watson, Francis Crick, Rosalind Franklin, and Maurice Wilkins were instrumental in solving DNA structure and suggesting its relationship with genetic transfer of information.
* Manet, Julie, Rosalind de Boland Roberts, and Jane Roberts.
* Brown-Grant, Rosalind., Christine de Pizan and the Moral Defence of Women: Reading beyond Gender.
* Brown-Grant, Rosalind.
* 1929 – Rosalind Hurley, British physician, barrister, ethicist and writer ( d. 2004 )
Thayer moved to Santa Barbara in 1912, where he married Rosalind Buel Hammett and retired.
Using " Photo 51 " ( the X-ray diffraction results of Raymond Gosling and Rosalind Franklin of King's College London, given to them by Gosling and Franklin's colleague Maurice Wilkins ), Watson and Crick together developed a model for a helical structure of DNA, which they published in 1953.
A key piece of experimentally-derived information came from X-ray diffraction images that had been obtained by Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin, and their research student, Raymond Gosling.
Of great importance to the model building effort of Watson and Crick was Rosalind Franklin's understanding of basic chemistry, which indicated that the hydrophilic phosphate-containing backbones of the nucleotide chains of DNA should be positioned so as to interact with water molecules on the outside of the molecule while the hydrophobic bases should be packed into the core.
Crick described what he saw as the failure of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin to cooperate and work towards finding a molecular model of DNA as a major reason why he and Watson eventually made a second attempt to do so.
* Rosalind Cohen ( later Mrs. Dirk Wylie )
In the spring of 1935 Blair met his future wife Eileen O ' Shaughnessy, when his landlady, Rosalind Obermeyer, who was studying for a masters degree in psychology at University College London, invited some of her fellow students to a party.
* Randall, Annie J. and David, Rosalind G., Puccini & the Girl, Chicago: University of Chicago Press ISDN 0226703894
In 1940 Hawks returned to the screwball comedy genre with His Girl Friday, starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell.
Using X-ray crystallography, the structure of DNA was discovered by James Watson and Francis Crick with the help of previously documented experimental evidence by Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin.
The grail is central in many modern Arthurian works, including Charles Williams's novel War in Heaven and his two collections of poems about Taliessin, Taliessin Through Logres and Region of the Summer Stars, and in feminist author Rosalind Miles ' Child of the Holy Grail.
* Angie Barry ( Rosalind Chao ), one of Network 23's second-tier reporters.
There has been a significant revival of virtue ethics in the past half-century, through the work of such philosophers as G. E. M. Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Alasdair Macintyre, and Rosalind Hursthouse.

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