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Box 44

 Container

Contains 192 Results:

Telegram from Philip Showalter Hench to Eleanor Lappage,  January 8, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412007
Scope and Contents

Hench informs Lappage that he has completed his reading copy for the Congress on Nutrition and Vitaminology lecture, but that it requires editing before publication.

Dates:  January 8, 1952

Telegram from Eleanor Lappage to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 8, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412008
Scope and Contents

Lappage requests that Hench edit the final draft of his speech and mail it to her.

Dates:  January 8, 1952

Letter from Tom D. Spies to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 7, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412009
Scope and Contents

Spies regrets that the speech preparation has been so demanding on Hench. He believes Hench needs a good rest while he is in Cuba, and notes that there are only several short functions he need attend.

Dates:  January 7, 1952

Letter from C.F. Loranz to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 7, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412010
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 7, 1952

Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to C.F. Loranz,  January 9, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412011
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 9, 1952

Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Eleanor Lappage,  January 9, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412012
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 9, 1952

Letter from Currier McEwen to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 14, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412013
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 14, 1952

Telegram from Eleanor Lappage to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 15, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412014
Scope and Contents

Lappage informs Hench there will be no discussion of his paper, no occasion for informal remarks, and no facilities for showing his film. His bibliography can be whatever length he deems suitable.

Dates:  January 15, 1952

Letter from C.F. Loranz to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 15, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412015
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 15, 1952

Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to W. Edwin Hemphill,  January 22, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412016
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 22, 1952

Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Blossom [Emilie M.] Reed,  January 22, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412017
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 22, 1952

Letter from J.F. Siler to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 21, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412018
Scope and Contents

Siler discusses the possibility of establishing a permanent exhibit of Walter Reed material, as well as the pros and cons of placing it at the Walter Reed Medical Center or the Army Medical Museum. Hench would be of great help in selecting material to be used in an exhibit. He hopes Hench's Cuba trip will result in the Cuban government furnishing funds for the preservation of Building No. 1.

Dates:  January 21, 1952

Letter from W. Edwin Hemphill to Philip Showalter Hench,  January 30, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412020
Scope and Contents

Hemphill will send Hench additional copies of the “Virginia Cavalcade.”

Dates:  January 30, 1952

Letter from the secretary of Philip Showalter Hench to J.F. Siler,  January 30, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412021
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 30, 1952

Letter from the secretary of Philip Showalter Hench to Harry J. Warthem, Jr.,  January 30, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 12
Identifier: 04412022
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series IV. Philip Showalter Hench primarily consists of materials that Hench created or collected while researching the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in this series date from around 1850 to around 1865 with the bulk of the items dating from 1937 to 1960. Researchers who are studying the yellow fever experiments will be particularly interested in the materials (e.g. interviews, autobiographies) that document first-hand accounts of the events surrounding the experiments. Other...
Dates:  January 30, 1952

Not by Bread Alone,, by Philip Showalter Hench,  January 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 13
Identifier: 04413001
Scope and Contents

Hench's speech, for the Congress on Nutrition and Vitaminology, discusses nutrition and the importance of the enrichment of flour.

Dates:  January 1952

Not by Bread Alone,, by Philip Showalter Hench,  January 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 13
Identifier: 04413005
Scope and Contents

Hench's speech, for the Congress on Nutrition and Vitaminology, discusses nutrition and the importance of the enrichment of flour.

Dates:  January 1952

Speech given by Philip Showalter Hench to the Rotary Club of Havana,  January 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 15
Identifier: 04415001
Scope and Contents

In this speech, to the Rotary Club of Havana, [Hench] mentions his marriage, his admiration of those involved in the yellow fever experiments, and some of the people he has met through his yellow fever research.

Dates:  January 1952

Remarks introducing Philip Showalter Hench to the Rotary Club of Havana, January 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 15
Identifier: 04415004
Scope and Contents

The speaker mentions Hench's discovery of cortisone, his Nobel Prize, and the Order of Finlay award.

Dates: January 1952

Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Jose R. Andreu,  February 21, 1952

 Item — Box: 44, Folder: 16
Identifier: 04416001
Scope and Contents

Hench thanks Andreu for the Order of Finlay, and asks for a copy of Andreu's speech. He is delighted to know that there is a plan to memorialize Camp Lazear, and hopes that he will be able to attend the ceremony.

Dates:  February 21, 1952