User blog comment:Mr.123/On the Lookout For.../@comment-4820455-20170421095311

Got another few people to pop on the list!

Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov - was a Russian and Soviet biologist who specialized in the field of artificial insemination and the interspecific hybridization of animals. He may have been involved in controversial attempts to create a human-ape hybrid.

Rezső Seress - was a Hungarian pianist and composer who wrote a famous composition Szomorú Vasárnap ("Gloomy Sunday"), written in 1933, which gained infamy as it became associated with a spate of suicides.

Egas Moniz - developed the lobotomy.

Louis Alexander Slotin - was a Canadian physicist and chemist who worked on the Manhattan Project. Slotin was the second person to die from a criticality accident, following the death of Harry Daghlian, who had been exposed to radiation by the same core that killed Slotin. Slotin was publicly hailed as a hero by the United States government for reacting quickly and preventing his accident from killing any colleagues.

Joseph Goldberger - was an American physician and epidemiologist employed in the United States Public Health Service (PHS). He was an advocate for scientific and social recognition of the links between poverty and disease.

Fritz Haber - was a German chemist who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1918 for his invention of the Haber–Bosch process, a method used in industry to synthesize ammonia from nitrogen gas and hydrogen gas. Haber is also considered the "father of chemical warfare" for his years of pioneering work developing and weaponizing chlorine and other poisonous gases during World War I.

Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov - was a prominent Russian and Soviet botanist and geneticist best known for having identified the centres of origin of cultivated plants.

José Manuel Rodríguez Delgado - was a Spanish professor of physiology at Yale University, famed for his research on mind control through electrical stimulation of the brain.