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Milton C. Winternitz - Plate III (Fig. 2): Trachea and lungs of dog dying 5 days after gassing.

Plate III (Fig. 2): Trachea and lungs of dog dying 5 days after gassing. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
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Milton C. Winternitz

Milton Winternitz led Yale Medical School as its Dean from 1920 to 1935. An innovative, even maverick leader, he not only kept the school from going under, but turned it into a first-class research institution. Dedicated to the new scientific medicine established in Germany, he was equally fervent about "social medicine" and the study of humans in their culture and environment. He established the "Yale System" of teaching, with few lectures and fewer exams, and strengthened the full-time faculty system; he also created the graduate-level Yale School of Nursing and the Psychiatry Department, built numerous new buildings, and much more.

More Illustrations in Book: Collected Studies on the Pathology of War Gas Poisoning (View all 30)

Plate XXXI (Fig. 3): Spleen, kidney, and section of aorta of dog surviving 49 hours after inhalation of arsine.

Plate XXXI (Fig. 3): Spleen, kidney, and section of aorta of dog surviving 49 hours after inhalation of arsine. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXII (Fig. 3): Large areas of atelectasis in an emphysematous lobe of a dog’s lung. (Fig. 4) Tongue, larynx, and trachea of dog 2 days after exposure to mustard gas, showing edema of larynx, membranous tracheitis, and laryngitis.

Plate XXII (Fig. 3): Large areas of atelectasis in an emphysematous lobe of a dog’s lung. (Fig. 4) Tongue, larynx, and trachea of dog 2 days after exposure to mustard gas, showing edema of larynx, membranous tracheitis, and laryngitis. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XIII (Fig. 1): Heart and lungs of dog dying 12 hours after chlorpicrin gassing.

Plate XIII (Fig. 1): Heart and lungs of dog dying 12 hours after chlorpicrin gassing. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XX (Fig. 1): Water color drawing showing lungs and trachea of dog dying 37 hours after exposure.

Plate XX (Fig. 1): Water color drawing showing lungs and trachea of dog dying 37 hours after exposure. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXVIII (Fig. 3): Lungs of dog surviving 7 hours after a lethal dose of cyanogen bromide.

Plate XXVIII (Fig. 3): Lungs of dog surviving 7 hours after a lethal dose of cyanogen bromide. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXIV (Fig. 18): Pneumonia with early abscess formation in dog dying 5 days after exposure to mustard gas.

Plate XXIV (Fig. 18): Pneumonia with early abscess formation in dog dying 5 days after exposure to mustard gas. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXVII (Fig. 1): Lungs of dog, surviving 5 hours, gassed with a high concentration of cyanogen chloride.

Plate XXVII (Fig. 1): Lungs of dog, surviving 5 hours, gassed with a high concentration of cyanogen chloride. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XVIII (Fig. 2): Lungs and trachea of dog dying 2 days after exposure to superpalite.

Plate XVIII (Fig. 2): Lungs and trachea of dog dying 2 days after exposure to superpalite. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXVI (Fig. 22): Eye of dog dying 4 days and 21 hours after exposure to mustard gas. (Fig. 23) Eye of animal dying 7 days after exposure to mustard gas. (Fig. 24) Water color drawing of trachea showing constriction below larynx; 1 month after exposure.

Plate XXVI (Fig. 22): Eye of dog dying 4 days and 21 hours after exposure to mustard gas. (Fig. 23) Eye of animal dying 7 days after exposure to mustard gas. (Fig. 24) Water color drawing of trachea showing constriction below larynx; 1 month after exposure. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate VI (Fig. 2): Trachea of same case, opened from behind.

Plate VI (Fig. 2): Trachea of same case, opened from behind. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XXV (Fig. 19): Necrotizing membrane of epiglottis and larynx and extensive pneumonia 5 days after a 30-minute exposure to mustard gas.

Plate XXV (Fig. 19): Necrotizing membrane of epiglottis and larynx and extensive pneumonia 5 days after a 30-minute exposure to mustard gas. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XVII (Fig. 1): Thoracic organs in situ of a dog surviving 24 hours after a lethal dose of superpalite.

Plate XVII (Fig. 1): Thoracic organs in situ of a dog surviving 24 hours after a lethal dose of superpalite. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate IX (Fig. 16): Lung of dog killed 14 days after gassing.

Plate IX (Fig. 16): Lung of dog killed 14 days after gassing. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate XI (Fig. 2): Lungs of rabbit exposed to phosgene.

Plate XI (Fig. 2): Lungs of rabbit exposed to phosgene. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
Plate VIII (Fig. 13): Broncho-pneumonia and purulent bronchitis in dog dying 5 days after gassing.

Plate VIII (Fig. 13): Broncho-pneumonia and purulent bronchitis in dog dying 5 days after gassing. (1920)

Milton C. Winternitz (American, 1885-1959)
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