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Liane Russell : ウィキペディア英語版 | Liane Russell
Liane Brauch "Lee" Russell (born August 27, 1923) is an American geneticist and conservationist. Her studies in mammalian genetics provided the basis for understanding the chromosomic basis for sex determination in mammals and the effects occasioned by radiation, drugs, fuels and waste on mice. Her research allowed better understanding of genetic processes in mammals, mutagenesis and teratogenesis effects on mammals, and knowledge of how these processes can be prevented and avoided. == Early life == Russell was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1923, to a Jewish household. Her father was a chemist. From the age of 3 to 15, the family lived on the Wiedner Hauptstrasse, not far from the Vienna Opera. There were frequent musical gatherings in the apartment, and the family enjoyed skiing and other outings in the Alps. One of her childhood playmates was first cousin, Robert Starer, Austrian-born American composer and pianist. Her somewhat idyllic childhood abruptly came to an end on the evening of March 12, 1938, but her family stayed in Vienna even after the Anschluss. Through a clever business scheme, which involved the surrender of her father's business to the Nazis, the immediate family (father, mother, younger sister and younger brother) eventually escaped to London. She moved to the United States in 1941 and became a naturalized American citizen in 1946. She met zoologist William L. Russell during a college summer school program, where he was her mentor. They married and worked together as geneticists at Jackson Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Together they had two children, a son, David (b. 1950) and a daughter, Evelyn (b. 1952).
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