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McClintock was one of the big names of 20th century genetics. Does this article read-through ok for non-scientists? Is there anything that is missing or could be expanded upon?-- nixie 01:01, 10 October 2005 (UTC) reply

  • I'm not sure of anything is missing yet, but it can definitely use some adjusting for the non-scientists. I'm a scientist (or at least studying to be one) and even I don't understand some of it. I'll try to fit in a review and some comments as soon as possible. - Mgm| (talk) 18:47, 11 October 2005 (UTC) reply
  • I read the article and feel it is very good overall. True, more detail could be provided but it's a well-crafted article. I've read a great deal on McClintock including Nathan Comfort's biography, and added some informtaion on his book and Fox Keller's biography as well as the citation for Comfort's book. Somewhere online I have seen a paper entitled "The Real Point is Control" written by Comfort on McClintock and this paper is very good. I am not sure if it is availible free of charge or my university subscribes to the journal it was in and therefore I was able to call it up. That said, I would love to see this article as a featured article. McClintock deserves it.-- Mike 00:44, 16 October 2005 (UTC) reply
  • Found Comfort's article:

Thanks Mike, I have access to that journal though uni, jugding by the size of it- it should be very useful for expanding or creating a section on how her ideas were recieved. -- nixie 00:00, 17 October 2005 (UTC) reply

Structure wise has a few short paragraphs and one or two one-sentence paragraphs. And "Early Life" is a little short... Ryan Norton T | @ | C 21:33, 21 October 2005 (UTC) reply

As of 06/03/06, I think the amount of early life detail is fine. Could do with a 'private life' section detailing relationships, marriage(s), children etc or at least a statement if none of these apply.-- ChrisJMoor 01:26, March 6, 2006 (UTC)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

McClintock was one of the big names of 20th century genetics. Does this article read-through ok for non-scientists? Is there anything that is missing or could be expanded upon?-- nixie 01:01, 10 October 2005 (UTC) reply

  • I'm not sure of anything is missing yet, but it can definitely use some adjusting for the non-scientists. I'm a scientist (or at least studying to be one) and even I don't understand some of it. I'll try to fit in a review and some comments as soon as possible. - Mgm| (talk) 18:47, 11 October 2005 (UTC) reply
  • I read the article and feel it is very good overall. True, more detail could be provided but it's a well-crafted article. I've read a great deal on McClintock including Nathan Comfort's biography, and added some informtaion on his book and Fox Keller's biography as well as the citation for Comfort's book. Somewhere online I have seen a paper entitled "The Real Point is Control" written by Comfort on McClintock and this paper is very good. I am not sure if it is availible free of charge or my university subscribes to the journal it was in and therefore I was able to call it up. That said, I would love to see this article as a featured article. McClintock deserves it.-- Mike 00:44, 16 October 2005 (UTC) reply
  • Found Comfort's article:

Thanks Mike, I have access to that journal though uni, jugding by the size of it- it should be very useful for expanding or creating a section on how her ideas were recieved. -- nixie 00:00, 17 October 2005 (UTC) reply

Structure wise has a few short paragraphs and one or two one-sentence paragraphs. And "Early Life" is a little short... Ryan Norton T | @ | C 21:33, 21 October 2005 (UTC) reply

As of 06/03/06, I think the amount of early life detail is fine. Could do with a 'private life' section detailing relationships, marriage(s), children etc or at least a statement if none of these apply.-- ChrisJMoor 01:26, March 6, 2006 (UTC)


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