Showing Collections: 461 - 470 of 766
Marion A. Blankenhorn Papers
Contains correspondence, diaries, printed matter, clippings, orders, printed ephemera, and patient record books and transfer cards, all relating to Base Hospital No. 4 (Lakeside Unit, Cleveland, Ohio and Rouen, France) during World War I.
Mark M. Ravitch Papers
Collection documents Dr. Ravitch's career as a pioneering thoracic and pediatric surgeon and developer of surgical stapling techniques through correspondence, administrative records, writings, motion pictures, and editorial duties on various journals and textbooks.
Marsden Scott Blois Papers
Notes, reports, articles and speeches document Dr. Blois' work with biophysics, melanoma and melanin research, and the development of medical informatics.
Marshall Nirenberg papers
UNPROCESSED COLLECTION. Additional awards, records and correspondence kept by Dr. Nirenberg at his homes. Genetic code experiment laboratory notebooks (1962-1969) created by Levin while a postdoctoral fellow in Nirenberg's lab.
Marshall W. Nirenberg Papers
Marshall W. Nirenberg is best known for his work on deciphering the genetic code by discovering the unique code words for the twenty major amino acids that make-up DNA, for which he won the Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology in 1968. This collection of correspondence, laboratory administrative and research materials, and publications documents Nirenberg's career as a researcher in biochemical genetics at the National Institutes of Health.
Martin Rodbell Papers
Marvin Schneiderman papers
UNPROCESSED COLLECTION. Dr. Schneiderman (1918-1997) worked at NCI from 1948-1980, thereafter doing work for private concerns. Collection includes folders on correspondence, critiques and reviews, toxicology, risk assessment, ethical and legal issues, data gathering, agent orange, and cancer.
Mary Eugenie Maver Papers
Consists of the author's autobiography (78 p.), some biographical information, correspondence, and a list of publications.
Mason V. Hargett Papers
Mason V. Hargett contributed significantly to the field of tropical medicine with his work on the yellow fever vaccine, first with the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil and then at the USPHS Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana. Hargett's research facilitated the introduction of a yellow fever vaccine produced without human serum.
Materials and papers on medical informatics
UNPROCESSED COLLECTION. Includes materials from the American College of Medical Informatics Conference on the History of Medical Informatics held at NLM, Nov. 1987; 1 in. videos and audiotapes of the proceedings; books, proceedings, and reports with emphasis on the state of clinical information systems in the mid 1970s; and, unpublished materials such as advertisements for hospital information systems.