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Olga Lepeshinskaya (biologist) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Olga Lepeshinskaya (biologist)
Olga Borisovna Lepeshinskaya ((ロシア語:Ольга Борисовна Лепешинская)) born as Protopopova ((ロシア語:Протопопова)) (August 18, 1871 – October 2, 1963), was a Soviet biologist, a personal protegée of Vladimir Lenin, later Joseph Stalin, Trofim Lysenko and Alexander Oparin. She rejected genetics and was an advocate of spontaneous generation of life from inanimate matter. ==Biography== Lepeshinskaya completed her study as a feldsher in St. Petersburg in 1887 and practised at various places in Siberia. In 1898 she joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and later the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. In 1903 she and her husband left Russia and went into exile to Switzerland for three years. In 1915, she completed her medical training in Moscow. Lepeshinskaya was a participant in the October Revolution. She lectured at the University of Medicine in Moscow until 1926, briefly interrupted by a 1919 stay at the Tashkent University, then worked at the Kliment Timiryazev Institute of Biology. In 1941 she became the head of the Department of Live Matter at the Institute of Experimental Biology, USSR Academy of Medical Sciences for the remainder of her career.〔 Lepeshinskaya worked well into her eighties and died in Moscow at the age of 92 from pneumonia.
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