yes
It's not too bad but you do have to be a clever-clocks to be able to do some of the things they do
Perhaps a scientist is being paid a grant by the government for his research to help prove Global Warming is man made, and when the results do not agree, he is worried that he will lose his grant, so he falsifies a study.Never do this. If you are caught, you could lose your whole career as a scientist.
In his later career, George Carver collaborated with his younger colleague Austin Curtis. Carter bequeathed some of his wealth to Curtis in his will.
forensic scientist, you could (with a few extra years of tertiary education) become a school teacher or even take your degree to a pHd level and become a professor
No, Rosalind Franklin did not have any children. She focused on her scientific research and career in molecular biology and X-ray crystallography.
From the age of 15, she knew she wanted to be a scientist. Her father discouraged it because it was very hard for women to have such a career. She went to St Paul's Girls School, on of the only schools that taught Physics and Chemistry to girls. She then went to Cambridge University to study Chemistry
Rosalind Franklin was a distinguished scientist whose research played a pivotal role in discovering the structure of DNA. However, she wasn’t widely credited for that discovery until fairly recently.She earned her PhD in physical chemistry from Cambridge University in 1945, and she did her pivotal DNA research at King’s College between 1951 and 1953. The controversy over her role in the discovery of DNA’s structure stems from the fact that Maurice Wilkins, another researcher at King’s College, showed Franklin’s images of DNA to James Watson, another scientist trying to create a DNA model. Watson and his research partner Francis Crick published a paper about it shortly after, and Wilkins, Watson, and Crick all went on to receive a Nobel Prize for the double helix DNA model. Franklin was not recognized.She spent the rest of her career studying viruses at Birkbeck College, and she passed away in 1958.
Yes, Rosalind Franklin faced challenges in her career, including experiencing sexism in the male-dominated scientific field of her time. She also faced professional conflicts with colleagues over credit for her work on DNA structure, most notably with the publication of the famous double helix model by Watson and Crick.
Jewel Plummer Cobb overcame racial and gender discrimination in her field of biology and academia. She faced barriers to pursuing higher education and career opportunities due to systemic prejudices but persevered to become a prominent scientist and educator, advocating for increased diversity and inclusion in the sciences.
yes
Aretha Franklin began her sining career at New Bethel Baptist Church in Detroit.
He started his scientific career at University
i dont know you tell me
i think so
Franklin D. Roosevelt's political career began in 1910 when he was elected to the New York State Senate.
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