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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jean_MedawarJean Medawar - Wikipedia

    Jean Shinglewood Medawar, Lady Medawar (née Taylor; 7 February 1913 – 3 May 2005) was a British author and a former chairman of the Family Planning Association, and wife of the British Nobel laureate Sir Peter Brian Medawar.

  2. Jean Shinglewood Medawar, Lady Medawar (de soltera Taylor ; 7 de febrero de 1913 - 3 de mayo de 2005) [1] fue una autora británica y ex presidenta de la Asociación de Planificación Familiar , y esposa del premio Nobel británico Sir Peter Brian Medawar .

  3. Ganó el Premio Nobel de Medicina o Fisiología en 1960, junto con sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet, por su trabajo en los injertos de tejidos con la base de los trasplantes de órganos y su descubrimiento de la tolerancia inmunológica adquirida. Este trabajo fue usado para tratar quemaduras con injertos de piel.

  4. Biographical. Peter Brian Medawar was born on February 28, 1915, in Rio de Janeiro. He is the son of a business man who is a naturalized British subject, born in the Lebanon. Medawar was educated at Marlborough College, England, where he went in 1928. Leaving this College in 1932, he went to Magdalen College, Oxford, to study zoology under ...

  5. 9 de jun. de 2005 · Jean Medawar was the wife of Sir Peter Medawar, the distinguished UK transplant immunologist and Nobel laureate. She spent her life supporting her husband's career and working hard for causes she cared about and believed in—the global environment, population control, and family planning.

  6. 1 de abr. de 2002 · As its provocative title indicates, Hitler’s Gift is an account of the achievements of a group selected from among the thousands who fled Nazi oppression in Europe to find refuge in England in the 1930s. The book is a solid addition to the growing body of exile literature. The authors, Jean Medawar and David Pyke, are highly ...

  7. 6 de jun. de 2005 · Jean Medawar was the wife of Sir Peter Medawar, the distinguished UK transplant immunologist and Nobel laureate. She spent her life supporting her husband's career and working hard for causes she cared about and believed in—the global environment, population control, and family planning.