Keywords: smithsonian institution smithsonianinstitution smithsonian institution archives smithsonianinstitutionarchives 2012 women's history month womenshistorymonth women in science womeninscience seven standing group portrait geneticists genetics print dress hat bowtie eyeglasses glasses 1937 1930s thirties scientists science biology medicine medical genetics medicalgenetics twin studies twinstudies cancer oncology ophthalmology eugenics canadian canadian eugenics society canadianeugenicssociety academia government private 20th century - early 20thcenturyearly groupshot people indoor monochrome Subject: Yale University School of Medicine        United States Public Health Service        University of Western Ontario        American Society of Human Genetics        University of Oslo        Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases of New York City        University of Paris Type: Black-and-white photographs Date: 1937     C. 1937 Topic: Women scientists Local number: SIA Acc. 90-105 [SIA2008-5337] Summary: In this photograph, titled "Most Famous Cancer Researchers in the World," are shown (left to right): geneticist Clarence Cook Little (1888-1971); physiologist Edgar Allen (1892-1943); biologist Howard Bancroft Andervont (1898-1981); geneticist Madge Thurlow Macklin (1893-1962); physician Leiv Kreyberg (b. 1896); biophysicist Gioacchino Failla (1891-1961); and radiation oncologist Henri Coutard (1876-1950). At the time the photograph was taken, Little headed the Roscoe B. Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine; Allen was professor of anatomy at Yale University Medical School; and Andervont was with the U.S. Public Health Service. Macklin was then associate professor of histology and Embryology at University of Western Ontario, and later served as president of the American Society of Human Genetics. Kreyberg taught at the University of Oslo; Failla was then working at the Cancer Memorial Hospital of New York City; and Coutard was chief of the department of x-ray therapy for cancer at the Radium Institute, University of Paris Cite as: Acc. 90-105 - Science Service, Records, 1920s-1970s, Smithsonian Institution Archivess Persistent URL:Link to data base record Repository:Smithsonian Institution Archives View more collections from the Smithsonian Institution. Subject: Yale University School of Medicine United States Public Health Service University of Western Ontario American Society of Human Genetics University of Oslo Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases of New York City University of Paris Type: Black-and-white photographs Date: 1937 C. 1937 Topic: Women scientists Local number: SIA Acc. 90-105 [SIA2008-5337] Summary: In this photograph, titled "Most Famous Cancer Researchers in the World," are shown (left to right): geneticist Clarence Cook Little (1888-1971); physiologist Edgar Allen (1892-1943); biologist Howard Bancroft Andervont (1898-1981); geneticist Madge Thurlow Macklin (1893-1962); physician Leiv Kreyberg (b. 1896); biophysicist Gioacchino Failla (1891-1961); and radiation oncologist Henri Coutard (1876-1950). At the time the photograph was taken, Little headed the Roscoe B. Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine; Allen was professor of anatomy at Yale University Medical School; and Andervont was with the U.S. Public Health Service. Macklin was then associate professor of histology and Embryology at University of Western Ontario, and later served as president of the American Society of Human Genetics. Kreyberg taught at the University of Oslo; Failla was then working at the Cancer Memorial Hospital of New York City; and Coutard was chief of the department of x-ray therapy for cancer at the Radium Institute, University of Paris Cite as: Acc. 90-105 - Science Service, Records, 1920s-1970s, Smithsonian Institution Archivess Persistent URL:Link to data base record Repository:Smithsonian Institution Archives View more collections from the Smithsonian Institution. |