Template:Are You Sure/March 13: Difference between revisions

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• ... that chemist and US military officer '''[[Myrtle Bachelder (nonfiction)|Myrtle Bachelder]]''' was responsible for the analysis of the spectroscopy of uranium for the [[Manhattan Project (nonfiction)|Manhattan Project]] during the Second World War; and thatthe war, Bachelder made pioneering contributions to metallochemistry?
• ... that chemist and US military officer '''[[Myrtle Bachelder (nonfiction)|Myrtle Bachelder]]''' was responsible for the analysis of the spectroscopy of uranium for the [[Manhattan Project (nonfiction)|Manhattan Project]] during the Second World War; and thatthe war, Bachelder made pioneering contributions to metallochemistry?
• ... that '''''[[An American in Peristalsis]]'''' is a 1951 American musical biology film inspired by the 1928 orchestral composition ''An American in Peristalsis'' by physiologist-musician George Gershwin, and that the story is interspersed with dance numbers which illustrate radially symmetrical contraction and relaxation of muscles that propagates in a wave down a tube, in an anterograde direction, choreographed by Gene Kelly and set to Gershwin's music?

Revision as of 07:43, 13 March 2022

• ... that chemist and US military officer Myrtle Bachelder was responsible for the analysis of the spectroscopy of uranium for the Manhattan Project during the Second World War; and thatthe war, Bachelder made pioneering contributions to metallochemistry?

• ... that An American in Peristalsis' is a 1951 American musical biology film inspired by the 1928 orchestral composition An American in Peristalsis by physiologist-musician George Gershwin, and that the story is interspersed with dance numbers which illustrate radially symmetrical contraction and relaxation of muscles that propagates in a wave down a tube, in an anterograde direction, choreographed by Gene Kelly and set to Gershwin's music?