66 results on '"HARVEY AM"'
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2. Two mycoses first described at Johns Hopkins.
3. The influence of William Stewart Halsted's concepts of surgical training.
4. A century of clinical science at John Hopkins. Contributions to medicine by students, house officers and faculty.
5. Pioneers in urology: James R. Brown, Howard A. Kelly.
6. Arthur D. Hirschfelder--Johns Hopkins's first full-time cardiologist.
7. Orthopaedic surgery at Johns Hopkins: a heritage of excellence in clinical practice, training and research.
8. Research at Johns Hopkins on the thyroid gland and its diseases.
9. Warfield Monroe Firor: a surgeon for all seasons.
10. Pharmacology's giant: John Jacob Abel.
11. Tuberculosis: the study of a specific disease at Johns Hopkins.
12. The first full-time academic department of pediatrics: the story of the Harriet Lane Home.
13. Henry M. Thomas: Johns Hopkins's first neurologist.
14. Neurosurgical genius - Walter Edward Dandy.
15. Stanhope Bayne-Jones, 1886-1970: the story of a lifetime devoted to country and to medicine.
16. W. Horsley Gantt--a legend in his time.
17. Adventures in medical research. A century of discovery at Johns Hopkins.
18. Classical descriptions of disease.
19. Pioneer American virologist--Charles E. Simon.
20. Early contributions to the surgery of cancer: William S. Halsted, Hugh H. Young, and John G. Clark.
21. Teacher and distinguished pupil: William Henry Welch and George Hoyt Whipple.
22. Two mycoses first described at Johns Hopkins.
23. Creators of clinical medicine's scientific base: Franklin Paine Mall, Lewellys Franklin Barker, and Rufus Cole.
24. John Whitridge Williams--his contributions to obstetrics.
25. Compleat clinician and Renaissance pathologist: Louis Hamman and Arnold R. Rich.
26. More bright stars in the Johns Hopkins galaxy.
27. Johns Hopkins and yellow fever: a story of tragedy and triumph.
28. Medical students on the march: Brown, MacCallum, and Opie.
29. Hematological firsts at Hopkins.
30. Fountainhead of American physiology: H. Newell Martin and his pupil William Henry Howell.
31. Harvey Williams Cushing: the Baltimore period, 1896-1912.
32. The story of chemotherapy at Johns Hopkins: Perrin H. Long, Eleanor A. Bliss, and E. Kennerly Marshall, Jr.
33. Contributions of the part-time staff of The Johns Hopkins Hospital: Moore, King, and Gay.
34. The conquest of scarlet fever: some Johns Hopkins contributions.
35. The Cayetano Heredia (Lima) exchange program.
36. Albion Walter Hewlett: pioneer clinical physiologist.
37. A new school of anatomy: the story of Franklin P. Mall, Florence R. Sabin, and John B. MacCallum.
38. Compleat clinician and a renaissance pathologist: Louis Hamman and Arnold R. Rich.
39. Johns Hopkins and biomedical communication.
40. Amebic dysentery gets its name: the story of William Thomas Councilman.
41. Snake venom and medical research--some contributions related to the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
42. Pharmacology's giant: John Jacob Abel.
43. Classical descriptions of disease.
44. The department of physiological chemistry: its historical evolution.
45. Discoveries at Johns Hopkins related to the nervous system and its diseases.
46. Pioneers in urology: James R. Brown and Howard A. Kelly.
47. Early contributions to the surgery of cancer: William S. Halsted, Hugh H. Young and John G. Clark.
48. A century of clinical science at Johns Hopkins: contributions to medicine by students, house officers, and faculty.
49. Helen Brooke Taussig.
50. Johns Hopkins--its role in medical education for women.
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