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Ribbon schematic of Triosephosphate isomerase, hand-drawn by Jane Richardson All-atom contact dots for two well-packed Ala residues. Jane Shelby Richardson (born January 25, 1941) [1] [2] is an American biophysicist best known for developing the Richardson diagram, or ribbon diagram, a method of representing the 3D structure of proteins. [3]
First Edition, with dust cover. Modern Woman: The Lost Sex is a 1947 work of scientific literature written by Ferdinand Lundberg and Marynia F. Farnham, M.D. which discusses the sociological and psychological context of American women in the post World War II era.
Emily Nagoski (born 1977) [2] is an American sex educator and researcher, and author of books including Come as You Are. [3] She is the former director of wellness education at Smith College , where she taught a course on women's sexuality .
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Its emphasis on women's active engagement with their actual sexual desires stood in contrast to the societal notion of the role of "women as docile and passive," and "men as active and aggressive" in a sexual relationship. [2] The book has been translated and adapted by women's groups around the world and is available in 33 languages. [3]
Modern girls were depicted as living in the cities, being financially and emotionally independent, choosing their own suitors, and apathetic towards politics. [3] The woman's magazine was a novelty at this time, and the modern girl was the model consumer, someone more often found in advertisements for cosmetics and fashion than in real life.
A close analog of a stapled peptide drug invented in the Verdine Lab, sulanemadlin (ALRN-6924), is a first-in-class dual MDM2/MDMX inhibitor currently in Phase II clinical development by Aileron Therapeutics, [4] which he co-founded in 2005. FogPharma, founded in 2016, aims to further develop stapled peptide technology for therapeutic use.
Woman, Culture, and Society, first published in 1974 (Stanford University Press), is a book consisting of 16 papers contributed by female authors and an ...