Theodore Woodward
From Wikipedia, the chargeless encyclopedia
Theodore E. Woodward (born March 22, 1914, in Westminster, Maryland — died July 11, 2005, in Baltimore, Maryland) was a acclaimed University of Maryland, Baltimore researcher in the acreage of Medicine. In 1934, he accelerating from Franklin & Marshall College.1 In 1948, he accustomed a Nobel Prize choice for his role in accolade cures for typhus and typhoid fever.
Trivia
Woodward is credited with inventing the afterward aphorism:
- "When you apprehend hoofbeats abaft you, don't apprehend to see a zebra."
References
External links
- Medical Alumni Association mini-biography
- Press release announces Woodward as the 2001 Alumni Citation accolade almsman from Franklin & Marshall College.
| This Maryland-related commodity is a stub. You can advice Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This biographical commodity accompanying to medicine in the United States is a stub. You can advice Wikipedia by expanding it. |