r, mawr, mohr]
| 1. | Archibald Lee (Archie ), 1913–1998, U.S. boxer. |
| 2. | Brian, 1921–1999, U.S. novelist. |
| 3. | Clement Clarke, 1779–1863, U.S. scholar and writer. |
| 4. | Douglas Stuart, 1893–1969, U.S. composer. |
| 5. | E⋅li⋅a⋅kim Hastings [i-lahy-uh-kim] , 1862–1932, U.S. mathematician. |
| 6. | George, 1852–1933, Irish novelist, critic, and dramatist. |
| 7. | G(eorge) E(dward), 1873–1958, English philosopher. |
| 8. | Gerald, 1899–1987, British pianist. |
| 9. | Henry, 1898–1986, English sculptor. |
| 10. | Sir John, 1761–1809, British general. |
| 11. | John Bas⋅sett [bas-it, -et] , 1860–1947, U.S. jurist. |
| 12. | Marianne (Craig), 1887–1972, U.S. poet and critic. |
| 13. | Stanford, 1913–82, U.S. biochemist: Nobel prize for chemistry 1972. |
| 14. | Thomas, 1779–1852, Irish poet. |
| 15. | a city in central Oklahoma. 35,063. |
Moore (m&oobreve;r, môr), Stanford. 1913-1982.
American biochemist. He shared a 1972 Nobel Prize for pioneering studies of the enzyme ribonuclease.