Armstrong – Table of Contents
This event at Warm Springs Georgia represents a culmination of appreciation by the public for Charles Armstrong and his distingu ...
Grouping on Wall of the Polio Hall of Fame, from left to right: Dr. Karl Landsteiner, Dr.^ Thomas M. Rivers, Dr. Charles Armstro ...
Ms. Mary Emma Armstrong at the Wall of the Polio Hall of Fame, January 2-3, 1958.^ Courtesy of Mary Emma Armstrong. Notes – Poli ...
Poliomyelitis prevention in the United States. Updated recommendation of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP ...
Schultz, E. W. and Gebhardt, L.P.: Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine 34: 133-135, 1936, quoted b ...
Armstrong, C.: Cotton rats and white mice in poliomyelitis research American Journal of Public Health 228-232, March 1941. Arms ...
The activities and program during the National Foundation’s 20th Anniversary Celebration and description of the Polio Hall of F ...
Hail to the Chief Following Charles Armstrong’s adaptation of poliomyelitis to the cotton rat and white mouse in 1939, he made n ...
last subject of interest was the study of the relationship of season and climate to the yearly prevalence of poliomyelitis (3). ...
Sedgwick award. Other associates or contemporaries of Armstrong who worked at NIH and who received the Sedgwick award included M ...
work. I know him also as an essentially human person, very modest, thoroughly kind, completely unselfish and of unfailing equani ...
effects of the agents (“human guinea pig”). These accusations demonstrated complete ignorance of Armstrong’s investigative integ ...
“Election to membership is by nomination only submitted by an Academy member. The candidates are selected primarily only in reco ...
was identical to the organism first isolated in Australia in 1936. Work on the organism was halted during World War II when the ...
In May 1942, Charles Armstrong became almost fatally ill from pneumonia caused by the bacterium that causes tularemia. He was st ...
1924, Drs. R. R. Parker, R. R. Spencer with Francis, working at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory, reported that wood ticks (Dermace ...
Armstrong arrived in Hamilton, Montana on May 24, 1942 (22). His first symptoms began within 24 hours on May 25, 1942. He did no ...
Washington, D. C. area where he entered the newly constructed United States Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland on August 10, 1 ...
A young Public Health Service physician, Dr. Richard G. Henderson, assigned to the scrub typhus project, acquired a fatal labora ...
During Armstrong’s tenure as Chief of the Division from 1941 to 1948, and for several years beyond, the Division had many distin ...
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