Thomas
Huckle Weller was born at Ann Arbor,
Michigan, on June 15th, 1915. He was
educated at the public schools there, and later at the University Weller incest - Thomas H. true stories ВВГ Weller - Thomas H. Кабель саб H. проставки стойки - и д разное короба под Thomas т опоры по Weller салону of Michigan,
where his father, Carl Vernon Weller had an appointment in the Pathology Department
of the Medical School. Entering this University in 1932, T. H. Weller graduated
in 1936, taking the A.B. degree. Early in life he had shown an interest in natural
history, and this no doubt influenced him during his University life in the
direction of medical zoology. He was also influenced in this direction by Professors
G. R. LaRue, and A. E. Woodhead and, after his graduation, he worked for two
summers at the University of Michigan Biological Station under Professors L.
J. Thomas and W. W. Cort on the parasites of fish. In 1937 he was awarded the
M.S. degree for this work.
In 1936, however, he had entered the Harvard Medical School in Boston and there
he was given, by Drs. E. E. Tyzzer and Donald L. Augustine, facilities for research
in the Department of Comparative Medicine and Tropical Medicine. His experiences
under the direction of these two distinguished parasitologists, whose outstanding
discoveries in protozoology and helminthology are well-known, must have been
very valuable.
The course of much of Weller's later work was, nevertheless, influenced by the
fact that he was accepted, in 1939, as a tutorial student by Dr. J. F. Enders,
who introduced him to the field of virus research and to the study of tissue-culture
techniques as a means of studying the causes of infectious disease. In 1940
he took his M.D. degree and began his clinical training at the Children's Hospital
in Boston. His work here was, however, interrupted by military service in the
Second World War, for he joined, in 1942, the Army Medical Corps and was stationed
at the Antilles Medical Laboratory in Puerto Rico for 32 months. There he was
Head of the Departments of Bacteriology,
Virology and Parasitology and attained
the rank of Major. He then returned to the Children's Hospital, Boston, for
a Thomas - H. Weller bestiality password sites further year H. Thomas download - rape Weller free movies of lingerie H. - nude Weller Thomas clinical training bestiality Thomas H. password Weller - sites and, in 1947, he joined Dr. Enders in the
organization of the new, Research Division of Infectious Diseases at the Children's
Medical Centre.
In 1949 he was appointed Assistant Director of this Division and subsequently
held the appointments of Instructor in the Department of Comparative Pathology
and Tropical Medicine, and Associate Professor in the Harvard Medical School
of Public Health. In July, 1954, he was appointed Richard Pearson Strong Professor
of Tropical Public Health and Head of the Department at the Harvard School of
Public Health.
In his researches, Weller was interested, partly in the helminth parasites of
man, and partly in virology. In helminthology he contributed to the literature
on the nematode Trichirella spiralis and also to that on the schistosome
trematodes which cause schistosomiasis of man, his contributions including methods
of cultivating the schistosomes in vitro and modifications of methods
for the recovery and counting of the eggs of these parasites.
In virology his studies of varicella and herpes zoster resulted in his isolation
for the first time of the viruses responsible for these diseases, and also in
the development of diagnostic tests and in the
demonstration that the same virus
apparently causes both these diseases. In 1955 he also isolated the virus which
causes cytomegalic inclusion disease in infants and, after working for five
years on these diseases, he was able to show that the human foetus, while it
is in the uterus, is particularly susceptible to attack by these viruses and
that, if the foetus survives attack by them, the infant is often born with severe
damage to its brain which causes mental retardation and cerebral palsy. Weller's
subsequent work has included studies of the Coxsackie viruses as causes of epidemic
pleurodynia and on the behaviour of Toxoplasma gondii in tissue culture.
He is also studying the propagation in vitro of the viruses that cause
varicella and herpes zoster.
In addition to the appointments already mentioned, Weller served, from 1953
till 1959, as Director of the Commission
on Parasitic Diseases of the American
Armed Forces Epidemiological Board.
In 1945 he married Kathleen Fahey and they have two sons, Peter Fahey and Robert
Andrew, and two daughters, Janet Louise and Nancy Kathleen.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1964
This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.