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  1. Olga Borisovna Lepeshinskaya (Russian: Ольга Борисовна Лепешинская), née Protopopova (Протопопова; August 18, 1871 – October 2, 1963), was a Russian revolutionary and Soviet pseudoscientist, who advanced her career as a biologist in the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences through fraudulent claims and ...

  2. MOSCOW, Oct. 3 (AP)-- Tass, the Soviet press agency, announced today the death of Dr. Olga B. Lepeshinskaya, an experimental biologist who was the Soviet Union's outstanding authority on how to...

  3. Olga Borisovna Lepeshinskaya born as Protopopova , was a Soviet pseudo-scientist, who advanced her career as a biologist in the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences through fraudulent claims and personal ties with Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, Trofim Lysenko and Alexander Oparin.

  4. Nov 29, 2017 · However, after the Russian Revolution some scientists apparently succeeded in proving it experimentally, and foremost among them was the researcher Olga Lepeshinskaya. She believed that if nucleic acid was mixed with carbonated molecules and the mixture was irradiated with ultraviolet light, what would appear would be no less than living cells.

    • Ilya Ivanov. By the time of the 1917 revolution, Ilya Ivanov was already an international celebrity, famed for pioneering artificial insemination techniques that were transforming world agriculture.
    • Alexander Bogdanov. Laid the groundwork for the Soviet Union’s first blood transfusion service, then died of blood poisoning. Alexander Alexandrovich Bogdanov, co-founder of the Bolshevik movement, lost interest in politics even as control came within his grasp, because he wanted to devote more time to his writing.
    • Trofim Lysenko. Stalin’s poster-boy and misguided “Messiah” of biological science. Practical, working-class, ambitious and working for the common good, the agrobiologist Trofim Lysenko was the very model of the new Soviet scientist.
    • Olga Lepeshinskaya. Olga Lepeshinskaya, a personal friend of Lenin and his wife, was terrifyingly well connected and not remotely intimidated by power.
  5. Moscow now has an Institute for the Prolongation of Life, headed by Septuagenarian Biologist Olga Lepeshinskaya.* Last week Comrade Professor Lepeshinskaya had some eye-opening news to pass...

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  7. Olga Lepeshinskaya may refer to: Olga Lepeshinskaya (biologist) (1871–1963), Soviet biologist. Olga Lepeshinskaya (dancer) (1916–2008), Soviet ballerina.

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