Authors: Brenda Maddox
âDenise Luzzati could see': AS interviews with Denise Luzzati, 26 and 28 May 1970, ASA.
âRosalind' s sister and brother': Jenifer Glynn to author, 27 Nov. 2001.
Rosalind, in her view, A. Oberlin to author, 12 May 2001.
âby means of X-ray diffraction': I.C.M. Maxwell to Principal, King's College, 7 Jul. 1950, CAC.
âI'd really like': RF to parents, 15 May 1950.
âpretty well top of the list': JTR to Principal, King's College, 19 Jun. 1950, CAC.
ânot pleased': author's interview with Noel Richley, 20 Jan. 1999.
âthere is a much healthier': RF to parents, I Aug. 1950.
âoscillate wildly': RF to CF, 26 May 1950.
âto change, ââSeine. . . Strand': RF to parents, 13 Jul. 1950.
âI have no idea': RF to parents, 21 Aug. 1950.
âOf course': JC interview with VL, 14 Jun. 1985.
âI can't possibly': RF to parents, 29 Oct. 1950.
âI spend half â: ibid.
âWhat depressed me most': RF to Evi Ellis, I Oct. 1950.
âPlease forgive me' and preceding information: RF to JTR, 24 Nov. 1950, CAC.
âAfter very careful consideration': JTR to RF, 4 Dec. 1950, CAC. The existence of this important letter was not known until it appeared in 1974 in Olby, op. cit., p. 346.
âDr Stokes . . . This means': ibid.
âforeigners better': RF to parents, 29 Oct. 1950.
Â
PART TWO
Â
EIGHT
What Is Life?
âPublished with other measurements': W.T. Astbury, and Florence O. Bell, âX-Ray Study of Thymonucleic Acid'.
âI have not published': Oswald Avery to Roy Avery, 26 May 1943 in J. Cairns, G. Stent and J.D. Watson,
Phage and the Origins of Molecular Biology,
pp. 3:85-7.
ânucleic acids must': O. Avery, C. MacLeod and M. McCarty, âStudies on the Chemical Transformation of Pneumococcal Types', pp. 137-59.
âdoing something': E. Schrödinger,
What is Life
? p. 70.
âWhen one of the inventors': G. Stent, âThat Was The Molecular Biology That Was',
Science,
160, 26 Apr. 1968; reproduced in Cairns et al. op. cit., p. 347.
Â
NINE
Joining the Circus
âgreat personal quarrels': H.F. Judson,
The Eighth Day of Creation,
p. 101.
âpatriarchy personified': S. Benstock,
Women of the Left Bank,
pp. 447-8.
âpolitically embittered': M. Franklin, âRosalind', p. 20.
âtense and unbending': author's interview with John Bradley, 28 Nov. 2000.
âevery time an Englishman': Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, âWhy Can't the English?': Act I, Song 2,
My Fair Lady,
drawn from G.B. Shaw's Preface to
Pygmalion.
âtypically upper-class': AS interview with Jean Hanson, ASA.
âProfessor of Dogmatic Theology': Mary Fraser to author, 16 May 2000.
âthe joint': Douglas Johnson, obituary of Lord Annan,
Guardian,
23 Feb. 2000.
âhooded crows': Dr Walter Gratzer, conversation with author.
âChere Mademoiselle' :
postcard from Faculte des Sciences de l'Universite de Paris, Laboratoire de Mineralogie (signature illegible), 2 Feb. 1951.
âthe PhD slave boy handed over in chains': Sayre, op. cit., p. 101.
âJT' etc: author's interview with RG, 19 Oct. 1999.
âbeautiful dark eyes': JC interview with RG, 19 Apr. 1985.
âto concern himself â: JTR to RF, 4 Dec. 1950, in Olby, op. cit., p. 346.
âvery attractive': author's interview with Louise Heller, 9 Jan. 2000.
âGosling, working in conjunction': JTR to RF, 4 Dec. 1950.
âgrab her and get her in on the DNA work': author's interview with MW, 4 Nov. 2000, and S. Chomet,
Genesis of a Discovery,
p. 15.
âa single DNA fibre': ibid., p. 17.
âequipment from Paris': Etablissements Beaudouin to RF, 16 Feb. 1951, JNC.
âcommunicated by': R. Franklin, âCrystallite growth in graphitising and non-graphitising carbons', pp. 196-218.
ârough edges': M. Wilkins, âJohn Turton Randall',
Biographical Memoirs,
pp. 510-11.
âmost valuable cargo': ibid., p. 505.
âput in his claim': JTR correspondence with his lawyers, the Ministry of Defence and the Royal Commission on Rewards for Investors, CAC.
âEndorsement for the unit': the history of the King's Biophysics Unit is told in Olby, op. cit., p. 329.
âbeef steak between the poles of his magnet': Wilkins, op. cit., pp. 510-11.
âRandall's Circus': this was occasionally a term of abuse, JC interview with RG, 19 Apr. 1985.
âlove of plants': Wilkins, op. cit., p. 510.
âtough as old leather': JC interview with MW, 17 Jun. 1985.
âa dog's walking': J. Boswell,
Life of Johnson,
p. 114.
âonly seven': O. Opfell, p. xiv;
The Lady Laureates
J. Mason, âWomen Fellows' Jubilee', p. 133.
âa quasi-religious': M. Wertheim, p. xiv.
âbarriers to the entry': ibid., p. xv.
âHarvard. . . cover of darkness': ibid., p. 223.
âcommand performance': author's interview with Heller, 9 Jan. 2000.
âsteady watchful dark eyes': Wilkins,
Memoirs,
pre-publication ms.
âHe discussed with her a paper': ibid.
âspikiness', âreal cream': ibid.
âtrust Avery': Chomet, op. cit., p. 13.
âjudged too severely': J.T. Randall, âAn Experiment in Biophysics', p. 2.
âyoung Norwegian researcher': ibid., p. 16.
ânecking': ibid., p.15.
âThis breaking down': ibid., p. 2.
âsevere cramps': University College Hospital record, AD1651, notes by Prof. Nixon, H.S., 2 Sep. 1956.
âOh well': JC interview with Freda Ticehurst, 31 May 1985.
âVery well read. . . bra undone': JC interview with Dr Simon Altmann, 26 Jun. 1985; author's interview with Altmann, 2 Dec. 1999.
ânot only took my lecture': AS to GCD, 28 Jun. 1978, ASA.
âCamembert': Margaret Nance Pierce to author, 24 Jul. 1999; âpotatoes': Liebe Klug, 7 Oct. 1999; âgarlic': author's interview with UR, 29 Jan. 1999.
âIs it your turn': author's interview with UR.
Â
TEN
Such a Funny Lab
âThanne longen folk': G. Chaucer,
Canterbury Tales,
Prologue.
âforeign visits':
MRC Annual Report,
1951-52, p. 41.
âhappy to stand in': Wilkins, op. cit.
âfantastically irregular': Watson,
The Double Helix,
p. 23.
âif Maurice really': ibid., p. 24.
âa natural structural system for biological macromolecules': Carlisle, op. cit., p. 29.
âafter having suffered': S. Furberg, âMy Work on Nucleic Acid Structure 1947-49'.
âsuper': author's interview with RG, 19 Oct. 1999.
âShe shouldn't': JC interview with Geoffrey Brown, 2 May 1985.
âhad the sort of â: author's interview with Louise Heller.
âMonsieur J. Mering': R. Franklin, âStructure of Graphitic Carbons', pp. 253-61.
âa rather peevish': R.F. Tuckett to AS, 8 Apr. 1976, ASA.
âHe's so middle-class': VL to author, 26 Oct. 1998.
âat least what one wants': F. Jacob,
The Statue Within,
pp. 262-3.
âthe biggest mistake': F.H.C. Crick,
What Mad Pursuit?,
p. 58.
âHelices were': ibid., p. 60.
âthe
solution': ibid.
âthe people giving': Richard Morrison, âWhat did the Festival of Britain organisers get so right?',
The Times,
26 Apr. 2001.
âits scientific genius': ibid.
âGo back to your microscopes': author's interview with MW, 4 Apr. 2000; also JC interview with MW, 17 Jun. 1985; Watson, op. cit.
âas far as the experimental X-ray effort': JTR to REF, 4 Dec. 1950, CAC.
âDecades later': author's conversation with MW.
âexciting project in biophysics': Wilkins, op. cit.
âNow she's trying': JC interview with G. and A. Brown, 2 May 1985.
âHer manner was brusque': Norma Sutherland Clarke in e-mail to author, 12 Jul. 2000.
âAnne knew': A. Piper, âCamping Holiday 1951', p. 7. privately circulated memoir; also mentioned in A. Piper, âLight on a dark lady', p.152.
âa heavenly view': RF to AW, 21 Oct. 1951, ASA.
âone of those very able': Piper, op. cit., p. 151.
âBrazenly he wrote': LP to JTR, 25 Sep. 1951, PA.
âWilkins and others': JTR to LP, 28 Aug. 1951, PA.
âworth perhaps 1/5000 of a Nobel Prize': Chomet, op. cit., p. 42.
âCrick's reply': Friedman and Friedland, op. cit., p. 210.
âStokes has supplied': MW to RF, in Olby, op. cit., p. 342.
âmost beautiful X-ray photographs': J.D. Bernal, âObituary, Rosalind Franklin',
Nature,
and M. Franklin, op. cit., p. 27. With hindsight, according to Aaron Klug, earlier photographs taken at King's had obtained fuzzy patterns that could later be recognised as the B form of DNA. Rosalind's unique achievement was twofold, âto obtain a well-defined B pattern and characterise it as belonging to a definite structural state of DNA': A. Klug, âRosalind Franklin and the Discovery of the Structure of DNA', p. 880.
âHow dare you interpret my data for me!': in Olby, op. cit., p. 344.
âweeping': C. Franklin, op. cit., p. 6.
âI'm sorry I have been silent': RF to AW, 21 Oct. 1951, ASA.
âFar from settling': author's conversation with MW, 3 May 2000.
âacting as Envoy': RG to JTR, 15 Aug. 1972, CAC.
âHe got very down': author's interview with Freda Ticehurst Collier, 14 Dec. 1999.
âIt's just like snot!': RG to JTR, 15 Aug. 1972, CAC.
âWe ended up smelling': R.D.B. Fraser to author, 31 Mar. 2001.
âthe borderline between': Crick, op. cit., p. 20.
âthis side of eccentric': JC interview with G. and A. Brown.
âshe wore white': author's interview with RG, 19 Oct. 1999.
âTo Dorothy Hodgkin': G. Ferry,
Dorothy Hodgkin: A Life,
p. 246.
âThat's the way we did it': R.D.B. Fraser to author, 10 May 2000.
âRosy's Parlour': JC interview with W.R. Seeds, 4 Jun. 1985.
âlittle schoolboys': ibid.
âWhen Fraser asked her': R.D.B. Fraser to author, 6 Feb. 2000.
âWilkins said the same': ibid.
âThat's very nice': author's interview with RG, 19 Oct. 1999.
âMomentarily': Watson, op. cit., p. 45.
âThough her features': ibid.
âthe product': ibid.
âStimulated': Olby, op. cit., p. 357.
âpugnaciously assertive': Watson, op. cit., p. 60. Watson ascribes this reaction to Gosling too.
ânow she was a little bit': RG to JC.
âin fact there was a lot of water': Olby, op. cit., p. 360.
âThis pact': Friedman and Friedland, op. cit., p. 223, âand Watson,
The Double Helix
pp. 13-14.
âThis interpretation': Joan Mason to author, 20 Aug. 1999.
âAlex Stokes had an equation': this ditty, performed at the 1952 Biophysics dinner, was written by and supplied by Stan Bayley and Prof. Edward Deeley.
âOver the holiday break': RF to AS, 1952, ASA.
Â
ELEVEN
The Undeclared Race
âIt's what a crystallographer': author's interview with VL, 26 Oct. 1998.
âCrystallographers, notably Dorothy Hodgkin': Dorothy Hodgkin note to AS, enclosed in letter to David Sayre, 6 Jan. 1975, ASA.
âAdrienne Weill was well aware': AS interview with AW, 11 Jun. 1970, ASA.
âReal test': RF notebook labelled
âStockholm 1951', FRNK 3/1, CAC.
âthe structure speaking': author's interview with L.H.L. Cohen, 2 Oct. 1999.
âthe queen of the Patterson': Ferry, op. cit., p. 244.
âGosling had nightmares': R. Gosling in Chomet, op. cit., p. 66.
âThat is what she felt she was there to do': ibid., p. 48.
âa helical structure': ibid, p. 4.
âwas also derived': W. Cochran, F.H.C. Crick and V. Vand, âThe Structure of Synthetic Polypeptides . . .', p. 582.
âWhat is it': RF to AS, 1 Mar. 1952, ASA.
âretreating into a disconcerting': Glynn, op. cit., p. 276.
âwatchful, suspicious and timid': Sir W. Scott, op. cit., Chapter 11.
âstacks'. . . âhomicide': AS to RF, 8 Mar. 1952, ASA.
âWhatever one may have against': RF to AS, I Mar. 1952, ASA.
âI went and took it back': author's interview with Geoffrey Brown, 10 Feb. 2000.
âShe nearly scared': author's interview with Sir John Cadogan.
âShe looked beautiful': AS interview with RG, ASA.
âFranklin barks': MW to FHCC, 1952, in Olby, op. cit., p. 366.
âHer thick sheaf of notes': R. Franklin, â5 lectures on X-ray diffraction', Jan-Feb. 1952, JNC.
âLike most British labs': G. Ferry quoting Warren Weaver of the Rockefeller Foundation, op. cit., p. 246.
âbest she had ever seen': ibid., p. 275.
âhandedness': ibid., pp. 275-6.
âWatson has often used': author's interview with Jack Dunitz, 2 Oct. 2000.
âFrom the X-ray evidence': MRC 52/200, PRO 72037, Ref. FD1-7102. Randall's progress report was one of two items on the agenda.
âwould not take no': Margaret Nance Pierce to author, 26 Jul. 2000.
â“Don't'' was Rosalind's advice': author's interview with Pauline Cowan Harrison, 26 Jul. 2000.