Abbott, Lillian;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Abbott, Dr. W. L.;
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Northeast, RFD #3, Maryland 1925; Maryland 1930; Northeast, Maryland 1932
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Abell, Mrs. Frank;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Jersey 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Abramson, Frederic
David;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1941, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; PhD (genetics) 1971 Univ. Michigan; genetic counselor, birth defects, Wayne State 1971-72; Dept. Community Medicine, Univ. of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington 1974; Health Management Systems Inc., 2115 Burnham Rd., Gaithersburg, Maryland 1979; epidemiology of abortion, public policy formulation; family and population planning
Publications:
"Spontaneous Fetal Death in Man" Social Biology, v. 20, 3
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1979
Abruzzo, Michael A.;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Dept. of Biological Sciences, California State Univ., Chico, California 95926
Source: Osborne list
Abt MD, Isaac A.;
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
1867-1955; MD Chicago Medical College (Northwestern); Northwestern Univ. Medical School (taught pediatrics 1909- 42); Pres., American Academy of Pediatrics; 4810 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, Illinois 1925; 104 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois 1932
Pubns:
Editor, Yearbook of Pediatrics 1902- 41
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Acheson Jr., Mr. Marcus
Wilson;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
b. 1873; d. 1943; lawyer; member, various firms with Sterrett and Acheson in title 1901-1943; Legal Aid Society; Bd. Dirs., Allegheny County Workhouse 1930-38; took conscientious objector cases in 1941; 1927 Oliver Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1925
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA
Achilles, Mrs. Edith
Mulhall;
Member 1925
Personal:
4 E. 95th St., New York City 1925
Source: 1925 list
Adamopoulus, George;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
1956 Athens, Greece
Source: EQ 1956
Adams, Mrs. C.H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Jersey 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Adams, Miss Emma F.;
Member
Personal:
1734 Jefferson St., Kansas City, Missouri
Source: 1925 list
Addison, Dr. W. H. F.;
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York, 1921)
Personal:
MD; b. Ontario, Canada 1880; d. 1963 (buried Oshawa, Ontario); MD Univ. Toronto 1917; his daughter is Mrs. John Gilchrist; Univ. Pennsylvania School Medicine, anatomy, 1905-48, Emeritus; Marine Biology Lab. Woods Hole
Pubns:
editor, Villiger's Brain and Spinal Cord; Piersal's Normal Histology; chps. in The Rat In Laboratory Investigation
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Adler, Dr. Herman M.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
119 E. Huron St., Chicago, Illinois 1925; California 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Adriance, V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Afleck, B.F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Georgia 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Agersborg, H. P. K.;
Member 1925
Personal:
b. Norway 1881; PhD Univ. Illinois 1923; Prof. Biology: James Millikan Univ., Decatur, Illinois 1924-28, Shepherd Univ. 1929-30, Atlantic Univ. 1930-32; traveling lecturer on conservation of land and water resources; Agersborg Laboratory (Founder/Director 1949-60); Mason (Eastern Star); International League of Norsemen
Publications:
Nature Lore 6 vols.
Source: 1925 list
Ahern, Frank;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Behavioral Biology Laboratory, Univ. of Hawaii, Honolulu; 1984 Institute for Human Development, Pennsylvania State Univ., College Park, PA, 16802
Publications:
1986 "Further Investigations of Educational and Occupational Attainment in the Hawaii Family Study of Cognition", Social Biology, v. 33, 1-2; 1983 "Family Background, Cognitive Ability, and Personality as Predictors of Educational and Occupational Attainment", Social Biology, v. 30, 1; used in The Bell Curve
Source: Osborne list; 1984 list
Albee, Edward;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Albert, Allen D.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Paris, Illinois 1925
Source: 1925 list
Alder, George C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Michigan 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Alexander, Douglas;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Alexander Jr., Prof. Dr.
Eben;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1913; MD; Neurosurgeon; Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Prof. 1949- (1979)
Source: EQ 1956; AMWS 12th Ed., 14th Ed
Alexander Jr., Mrs.
Eben;
Member 1956
Personal:
wife of Eben Alexander q.v.
Source: EQ 1956
Alfi, Omar S.;
Member 1974
Personal:
(Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921);
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, 4650 Sunset Blvd., California 1974
Source: Osborne list
Alford, Dr. Leland B.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Humboldt Bldg., St. Louis, Missouri 1925
Source: 1925 list
Allan, William;
Member 1930, 1938; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932); (Member, Eugenics Research Association 1938)
Personal:
306 N. Tyrone St., Charlotte, North Carolina 1932; Charlotte, North Carolina 1938; William Allan Award of American Society of Human Genetics named after him
Source: Sanger list 1930; AESM, May 1938; ERA list; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Allen, Prof. Bennet;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
909 Micheltoreana St., Los Angeles, California 1925; California 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Allen, Edward E.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Allen, Dr. Frederick
Madison;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
1879-(1974-76); MD Univ. California 1907; Research on diabetes: Harvard Med. School 1909-12, Rockefeller Institute 1913-18; Physiatric Institute, Morristown, New Jersey (Dir., 1920-33; investigated diabetes and other disorders of metabolism); Psychiatric Institute, Morristown, New Jersey 1925; New Jersey 1930; Staff, New York Medical College
Publications:
1919 Total Dietary Restriction in the Treatment of Diabetes; articles on shock treatment
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA v. 6
Allen, Lawrence;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Allen, Robert E.;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
New York 1930; 40 East 42nd St. New York City 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Allen, Samuel G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Allen, Yorke;
Member 1956
Personal:
Rockefeller Brothers Fund 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Allyn, Harriett M.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Almar, Franco;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Genoa, Italy 1974
Source: Osborne list
Als, Heidelise
see under Rivinus
Alvarez, Dr. Walter C.;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1884; MD 1905; d. 1978; Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota (head of section and senior consultant, Division of Medicine 1926-50, Emeritus 1950-78); University of Minnesota (Prof. of Medicine 1934-50); father of Luis W. Alvarez, Mrs. Bradley C. Brownson q.v.; His period as Emeritus overlaps with period when Blackmun was general counsel, advising on abortions but in 1950 he moved to Chicago and became a Lecturer in Medicine at the University of Illinois Medical School 1951- ; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954; founding member, American Assn. of Physical Anthropologists
Publications:
1956 "The Medical complaints of the Relatives of the psychotic, the alcoholic and the epileptic" Eugenics Quarterly, 3; The Emergence of Modern Medicine from Ancient Folkways; editor: American Journal of Digestive Diseases 1938-42, Gastroenterology 1943-50, Modern Medicine, Geriatrics; newspaper column (said that one in five American children needed specialized help in school); "Born that Way, A Practical Solution for the Constitutionally Inadequate", Scientific American, Nov. 1942, brief report, p. 202
Source: EQ 1956; WWWIA; Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954; Current Biography 1953
Ames, Hobart;
Member 1930
Personal:
b. Easton, Massachusetts 1865; d. 4/22/1945; son of Oakes Angier Ames; m. Julia H. Colony 1891; Board Directors: Ames Shovel and Tool Co., Oliver Ames and Sons Corp., Old Colony Trust Co. (Boston); Wyoming Shovel Co., Easton Land Co.; First National Bank of Easton (Pres.); offices in the Ames Bld., Boston
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ames, Mrs. Oakes;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ames, Prof. Oakes;
Member 1930
Personal:
b. N. Easton, Massachusetts 1874; Harvard Univ. (1898-1941; MA 1899; instr. to Prof. Botany 1898-1926; Prof. 1926-41, Emeritus; Curator, Botanical Museum; Supr., Arnold Arboretum (founded by his father); First National Bank of Easton, Bd. Dirs.; Office 81 Ames Bld., Boston; many medals for horticultural contributions, especially identifying and breeding orchids; see Oakes Ames, Jottings of a Harvard Botanist, Pauline Ames Plimpton, Botanical Museum Harvard 1979
-- son of Governor Oliver Ames (Massachusetts) who was involved in the financing of the Union Pacific Railroad and was the principal person named in the Credit Mobilier scandal over this financing. (see Hobart Ames, Henry Fairfield Osborn Senior, Frederick Osborn, Fairfield Osborn, Mrs. Mary Harriman and Mary Rumsey for other inheritors of Union Pacific Railroad money who went into eugenics.)
-- m. Blanche Ames 1900
-- son; Amyas Ames; Syosset, Long Island 1995
-- daughter; Pauline Ames Plimpton; d. April 17, 1995 aged 93; married Francis T.P. Plimpton (see The Plimpton Papers, Law and Diplomacy, Pauline Plimpton, Univ. Press America 1985; A Collector's Recollections, George Arthur Plimpton, Columbia Univ. Library 1992 (her father- in-law)); BA, Smith College; Board: Planned Parenthood, Institute for World Affairs, Public Education Association
-- George Plimpton; editor, Paris Review
-- Francis T. P. Plimpton Jr.; Ormond Beach, Florida 1995
-- Oakes A. Plimpton; Boston 1995
-- Sarah Plimpton; New York 1995
-- son, Oliver Ames
-- daughter, Evelyn
Source: Sanger list 1930; Obit, Pauline Plimpton, NYT April 17, 1995; WWWIA v. 3
??Blanche Ames; from prominent Massachusetts family; supporter of Margaret Sanger; Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America, Ellen Chesler, 1992, p. 171, 230, 346-47, 450- 51??
Ames, Winthrop;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Amos, Waldo A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Amoss MD DPH, Dr. Harold
Lindsay;
Member 1925
Personal:
b. 1886; d. 11/2/1956, Greenwich, Connecticut; Harvard (MD 1911, DPH 1912; Harvard Medical School, instr. preventive medicine and hygiene); Rockefeller Institute (pathology and bacteriology 1912-22); The Johns Hopkins Univ. Medical School, Baltimore, Maryland (assoc. prof. medicine 1922- 30); Duke Univ., Prof. Medicine 1930-33; Mason
Source: 1925 list
Anderson, Bishop
- see under Gregory, Mrs. Robert
Anderson, Lewis O.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Junior College, Hibbing, Minnesota 1925; Wisconsin 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Anderson, Robert Van
Vleck;
Member 1930
Personal:
b. 1884; d. Palo Alto, California June 6, 1949; petroleum geologist; BA Stanford Univ. (geology); survey California oil and petroleum resources; S. Pearson and Sons Ltd., England, geologist 1913-18; Whitehall Petroleum Corp Ltd., England (Dir. 1919-23, Chief geologist 1923-26); Algerian geological survey (1930-32, then for Socony Vacuum Oil Co. 1934-44); research assoc., Stanford Univ. 1945-49
Source: Sanger list 1930; WWWIA v. 2
Anderson, Mr. Robert V.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Menlo Park, California 1925
Source: 1925 list
Anderson, Samuel Wagner;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1898; d. 1963; Norwegian background; Assistant Secretary of Commerce 1954; Harvard Business School 1921 (co-founder, Harvard Business Review); Goldman Sachs and Co. 1923-31; Interstate Equities Corp. 1932; in charge of aluminum and magnesium production for WW II; Lehman Bros.; International Bank of Reconstruction and Development (Chief of Latin American Loan Dept.) 1949; Chief Consultant to the Eisenhower White House on foreign economic policy
Source: EQ 1956; Current Biography
Anderson, Prof. V.
Elving;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1921; PhD (zoology) Univ. Minnesota 1949; Dight Institute, 400 Church St. East, Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 (1954-(1979), asst. dir., 1954-78, Acting Dir. 1978-(79), Director, 1993); Univ. Minnesota, Prof. Genetics 1966-(1979); Behavior Genetics Assn., Pres., 1979; Member: American Society of Human Genetics, Genetics Soc. America
Publications:
1981 "Assortative Marriage", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 15, 1 (Social Biology, v. 29, #1-2 (reprinted in 1981 (v. 29) issue of Social Biology as one of the most frequently cited articles of Social Biology); 1973 "Intellectual Performance, Race and Socioeconomic Status", Social Biology, v. 20, 4; refereed manuscripts for Social Biology in 1977, 1979, 1980; book reviews for Eugenics Quarterly and Social Biology in 1970, 1972, 1975
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1979
Anderson, Prof. W. S.; (Member,
Second International Congress of Eugenics,
New York 1921); Advisory Council
1923-35;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Prof. of Genetics, College of Agriculture, Lexington, Kentucky 1914; State University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 1921; Univ. Kentucky, Lexington 1932
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 310; Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Anderson, Prof. Wyatt
W.;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1927; PhD (life sciences) 1967 Rockefeller Univ.; Dept. Zoology, Univ. Georgia, Athens (assoc. prof., 1972-75, Prof. Zoology 1975-(1979); Member: Soc. Study Evolution, American Society of Human Genetics, Genetics Society of America
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1979
Andrus, Margaret; (Member, Second
International Congress of Eugenics, New York
1921);
Member 1925, 1926
Personal:
Cold Spring Harbor, New York 1921; AES Committee on Formal Education (Exec. Secretary 1926)
Source: AESM 1925; Mehler, p. 82; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Angle, Dr. Edward H.;
Member 1925
Personal:
1025 N. Madison Ave., Pasadena, California 1925
Source: 1925 list
Angst, J.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Psychiatrische Universitatsklinik Zurich, Forschungsdirektion, Postfach 68, CH-8029, Zurich, Switzerland 1974; psychiatry
Source: Osborne list
Angulo, A.W.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Antley, Dr. Ray M.;
Member 1974; M 1976, 1980
Personal:
Methodist Hospital of Indiana Inc., Dept. of Medical Genetics, Indianapolis, Indiana 1974
Publications:
1980 "Elaboration of the Definition of Genetic Counseling into a Model for Counselee Decision Making", Social Biology, v. 27, 4; 1976 "Variables in the Outcome of Genetic Counseling", Social Biology, v. 23, 2
Source: Osborne list
Apgar MD, Dr. Virginia;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1909; MD Columbia 1933; MPH Johns Hopkins 1959; National Foundation-March of Dimes, 1275 Mamaroneck Ave., White Plains, New York (Dir., Division of Congenital Malformations 1959-68; v.p., Medical Affairs 1968-); Medical Center (Pres. ; clin. dir., anesthesia 1939-59)); Columbia Univ. (anesthesiology: instruct to prof. 1936-49, Prof. 1949-59); Cornell Univ. Medical College, Lect. 1965-; Member: APHA, Teratology Society, Perinatal Research Association, ASHG
Pubns:
1972 Is My Baby All Right? A Guide to Birth Defects; "Birth Defects: Their significance as a public health problem", JAMA, v. 204, #5, April 29, p. 79; 1961 "Human Congenital Anomalies: Present Status of Knowledge", American Journal of Diseases of Children, v. 101, #2, Feb., p. 249; 1952 Apgar Score
Background:
The Apgar Score, devised by Virginia Apgar, is a method of determining a newborn's condition and chances of survival within the first sixty seconds after birth.
Quotes:
-- 1961 Eugenics:
"Man as a species for experimental study [on congenital anomalies] is almost hopeless. He marries for love, not eugenic reasons" (1961 "Human Congenital Anomalies: Present Status of Knowledge", Apgar, American Journal of Diseases of Children, v. 101, #2, Feb., p. 250)
-- Folic Acid: Cure for Spina Bifida Overlooked by National Foundation
"... Thiersch ... has used aminopterin, a folic acid antagonist to produce abortion in young women with active tuberculosis. If too small a dose of the chemical is administered and abortion is not produced, there is a 100% incidence of abnormal offspring ... There is no real proof that an ample diet during pregnancy is accompanied by healthier infants ... Penrose and Stevenson [ES] are especially active in epidemiological investigations in Great Britain and Ireland in relation to congenital malformations. There is a surprising incidence of anencephaly in Dublin, exceeding that of Paris by a ratio of 20:1" , ("Human Congenital Anomalies: Present Status of Knowledge", Apgar, American Journal of Diseases of Children, v. 101, #2, Feb., p. 251)
(In 1991 it was discovered that lack of folic acid in the mother's diet caused the condition. The World War II diet reduced spina bifida and anencephaly in Britain so there was evidence in 1945 that diet affected these conditions. But this link was ignored for forty five years. There is no reason for most of the cases of spina bifida since the war except the fixation of Stevenson, Apgar, C. O. Carter and other eugenicists on a genetic explanation together with their dominant position in the groups such as the March of Dimes. But such tragedies will be repeated as long as eugenicists control these groups.)
-- Cleft Palate:
"excessive cortisone in mice is a reproducible way to produce cleft palate" ("Human Congenital Anomalies: Present Status of Knowledge", Apgar, American Journal of Diseases of Children, v. 101, #2, Feb., p. 251)
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 12th ed. (P&B)
Appelbaum, S.J.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Appleby, Edgar T.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Appleton, Edward A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Arena, Dr. Julio F. de
la;
Member (Foreign) 1956;
Personal:
MD; School of Sciences, Havana, Cuba 1956; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954
Source: EQ 1956; Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Arias-Bernal, Dr. Luis
F.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Spring Valley, New York 1974
Source: Osborne list
Ariton, A.V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
South Dakota 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Armelagos, Prof. George
J.;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1922; PhD (anthrop.) 1968 Univ. Colorado; Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst (Dept. of Anthropology, 1969-78, Prof. 1978-(1982)); see A. C. Swedlund q.v.; biological anthropology
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1979, 1982
Armendares, Salvador;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Mexico City 1974
Source: Osborne list
Armstrong, Dr.
Clairette;
Member 1938, 1956; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932); (Member, Eugenics Research Association 1938)
Personal:
MD; PhD; 9 East 97th St., New York City 1932; NYC 1956
Pubns:
1940 Consulting Editor, Birth Control Review, January; 1938 "The Moron Menace to Civilization", Birth Control Review
Quotes:
The Eugenic Reformation:
"... the 'biological repentance and reformation' recommended by Dr. Earnest Hooton q.v., Harvard anthropologist (see W. W. Howells q.v., ed. note), are heartily urged by the clinical psychologist, who in the course of mental measurements has a ringside seat at the struggle for existence of the mentally unfit ... a biological house cleaning ... is long overdue ... then perhaps civilization may advance with the survival of the fittest" (from 1938 "The Moron Menace to Civilization", Birth Control Review, p. 53)
Background:
1940 "We, too, recognize the problem of race building ... It is entirely fitting that 'Race Building in a Democracy' should have been chosen as the theme of the ANNUAL MEETING of the Birth Control Federation of America" from an editorial by Woodbridge Morris, Director, Birth Control Federation of America in the Birth Control Review, January 1940, vol. XXIV, #3
Source: AESM, May 1938; EQ 1956
Armstrong, D.B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Armstrong, Dr. S.T.;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
New York 1930; Hillbourne Farms, Katonah, Kentucky 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Arnold, Dr. E. Hermann;
Member 1925
Personal:
1460 Chapel St, New Haven, Connecticut 1925
Source: 1925 list
Arnold, Kristin;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. Psychology, Univ. Iowa, Iowa City 1974
Source: Osborne list
Arnquist, Miss
Josephine;
Member 1925
Personal:
Ext. Dept., Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa 1925
Source: 1925 list
Asana, J.J.;
Member 1930
Personal:
India 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ascham, John Bayne;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
b. 1873 Hawaii; Masonic clergyman; PhD Boston Univ.; travelled in Europe; research in Jerusalem 1913; Methodist pastor 1897-1925; Children's Home, Cincinnati (Exec. v.p. 1928-43); 909 Plum St., Cincinnati, Ohio 1932; Ohio Wesleyan Univ., Trustee; American Association Mental Deficiency; Mason 32 degree (Shriner)
Publications:
1921 Apostles, Fathers and Reformers; 1919 The Religion of Judah; 1914 The Religion of Israel; 1914 Syrian Pilgrimage; 1910 Help from the Hills
Source: Sanger list 1930; WWWIA v. 3; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Ascham, Leah;
Member 1930
Personal:
Georgia 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Astor, Vincent;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Background:
The Astor family had an American and a British branch. The Vincent Astor in Who's Who 1958-59 had no occupation except being "head of the Astor family in the US". The British branch included the chairman of the Times publishing company and an MP
Source: Sanger list 1930; The Protestant Establishment, D. Baltzell, p. 78
Atkinson, Mr. Henry R.;
Member 1956, 1974
Personal:
Brookline, Massachusetts 1956
Source: EQ 1956; Osborne list
Attah, Ernest B.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. Sociology, Brown University 1974
Source: Osborne list
Attneave, Dr. Fred;
Member 1969
Personal:
Dept. of Psychology, Oregon University 1969; see Keele, S.
Source: AESC 5/69
Auchincloss, Hugh;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Background:
Jackie Bouvier Kennedy was stepdaughter of an "Hugh Auchincloss". Louis Auchincloss wrote about the world of this family
Source: Sanger list 1930; The Protestant Establishment, E. Digby Baltzell, p. 302
Austin, Mrs. Gertrude
B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Austin, J. Harold;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Avent, J.E.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Tennessee 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Averill, Brian K.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Wolfson College, Selwyn Gardens, Cambridge Univ., England 1974
Source: Osborne list
Averill, George G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maine 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Avery, Roger C.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. of Sociology, Cornell Univ., Ithaca, New York 1974
Publications:
1979 "Measuring Potential Fertility Through Null Segments", Social Biology, v. 26, 4; 1978 "Patterns of differential mortality during infancy and early childhood in developing nations with examples from Costa Rica" w/ M. R. Haines, Paper presented at annual meeting Population Association, Atlanta, Georgia
Source: Osborne list
Ayer, Frederick;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ayer, James C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Babbott, Mr. Frank Lusk;
Member 1925, 1930; Advisory Council 1923-30; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics 1932)
Personal:
1854-1933; Bd. Dirs.: Atlantic Elevated Railroad, Long Island Railroad, Brooklyn Trust Co.; Brooklyn politics and do gooder; Eugenics Research Assn. (1922; Pres. 1927; ERA Cttee on Immigration (Member 1922, Chmn. 1926)); old stock
Source: AESM June 1926; Eugenics, Feb. 1929; Mehler, p. 311; Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Baber, R.E.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bachmann, H.A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bachrach, Arthur J.;
Member 1956
Personal:
Dept. of Neurology and Medical Psychology, Univ. of Virginia Hospital 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Bachrach, Christine;
Member 1974
Personal:
501 Constitution Ave., NE, Washington, DC; 6265 Sandchain Rd., Columbia, Maryland 21045
Pubns:
1987 "First premarital contraceptive use; United States, 1960-82", Stud Fam. Plan., v. 16(3):138 ff; "Understanding US Fertility: Findings from the National Survey of Family Growth, Cycle III", Population Bulletin, v. 39:1-42;
Source: Osborne list
Bacon, C.S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baer, Dee;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. of Biology, California State, San Diego 1974
Publications:
1970 "Lactase Deficiency and Yogurt", report, Social Biology, v. 17, 2
Source: Osborne list
Baier, Prof. Joseph G.;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1908; Univ. of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (1932-, Prof. 1945-68, Michael F. Guyer Prof. 1969-, Dean of College of Letters and Science 1956-66); electronic instruments, precipitins
Source: EQ 1956; AMWS 12th Ed.
Bailey, Miss Clara E.;
Member 1924
Personal:
Detroit, Michigan 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bailey, J.W.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Virginia 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baker, Mrs. Christina;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baker, George F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
?? granddaughter married to John Mortimer Schiff (senior partner, Kuhn, Loeb & Company; see Mrs. Otto Kahn q.v.), lived Oyster Bay, Long Island; The Protestant Establishment, E. Digby Baltzell??
Baker, H.G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Iowa 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baker, Paul T.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. Anthropology, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park; biological anthropology
Publications:
1974 "Altitude, Migration and Fertility in the Andes" 1974, Social Biology, v. 21, 1; 1966 "Human Biological Variation as an Adaptive Response to the Environment", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 13, 2
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 14th ed.
Balch, Mr. Francis N.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
60 State St., Boston, Massachusetts 1925, Massachusetts 1930
Background:
Samuel W. Balch, 160 Broadway, New York City 1921 (Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921)
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Baldwin, Jane N.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baldwin, Joseph C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baldwin, Dr. Wesley
Manning;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
b. 1879; d. 1975; MD 1911 Cornell Univ. (taught anatomy 1909-15); Union University, Albany Medical College, Albany, New York, Prof. Anatomy 1915-36; Mason; biological effects of X-Rays; muscle structure; pancreas
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA
Baldwin, W.D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Hawaii 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baldwin, William D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Balfour, Dr. Marshall
C.;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
MD; Red Cross Society Building, New Delhi, India 1956; Regional Director in the Far East, International Health Division, The Rockefeller Foundation, New York 1952
Publications:
1952 "The Control of Fertility in Japan" in Approaches to Problems of High Fertility in Agrarian Societies. New York, Milbank Memorial Fund; 1950 Public Health and Demography. Rockefeller Foundation
Source: EQ 1956
Ball, Ancell R.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ball, E.D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Arizona 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ball, Jau Don (sic);
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ballou, G.B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Oregon 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Ballows, Alma;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bamberger, Harry;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Jersey 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bangham, N.C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Ohio 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bangs, Ms. Catharine C.;
Member 1956
Personal:
New York City 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Bangs, Mrs. Francis N.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Jersey 1930; Birth Control Federation of America Inc. (Director at Large 1939)
Source: Sanger list 1930; Birth Control Review, Feb/March 1939 (list of Officers and Directors)
Bangson, John S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Kentucky 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Banker, Dr. Howard J.; (Member &
General Cttee, Second International Congress
of Eugenics, New York 1921);
Member 1925; Advisory Council 1925-35; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
1866-1940; PhD (botany) Columbia 1906; DePauw Univ., Prof. Biology 1904-14: Eugenics Record Office, Cold Spring Harbor, New York (investigator 1914-33; acting supt. 1915-16; acting asst. dir 1921-22); Second International Congress on Eugenics, Exec. Cttee; Address: 14 Myrtle Ave., Huntington, New York 1925; Eugenics Record Office 1932; old stock (Dutch)
Pubns:
The Bancker or Banker Families of North America 1909; wrote for J. of Heredity
Source: (Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921); 1925 list; Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 312; WSWIA; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Banne, William;
Member 1930
Personal:
Michigan 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Banta, Dr. A. M.; (Member, Second
International Congress of Eugenics, New York
1921);
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, New York 1921, 1925; New York 1930; Brown Univ., Providence, Rhode Island 1932
Source: 1925 list, Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Barakat, Bassam Y.;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
1984 Univ. of Maryland; 1974 Dept. OB-GYN, School of Medicine, American Univ., Beirut, Lebanon
Source: Osborne list
Barbour, Dr. Henry G.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky 1925; Kentucky 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Barbour, R.B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bardeen, Prof. C. R.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison 1925; Wisconsin 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Barewald, C.L.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Iowa 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Barish, N.;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Dept. Biology, California State College, Fullerton, CA 92635
Source: Osborne list
Barker, Ellen;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Dight Institute, Univ. Minnesota, Minneapolis; 427 Jefferson St, Bloomsberg, Pennsylvania 17815
Source: Osborne list
Barker, Prof. Franklin
Davis;
Member 1925
Personal:
b. 1877; d. 1936; PhD 1910 Univ. Nebraska; Univ. Nebraska, Prof. Medical Zoology 1903-26; Northwestern Univ. 1926-1936; address 1925: Station A, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska
Pubns:
1926 Synopsis of the Parasites of Man
Source: 1925 list; WWWIA
Barker, Lewellys A.;
Member 1930; (Sustaining Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Maryland 1930; 1035 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Maryland 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Barker MD, Dr. Lewellys
Franklin;
(General Cttee, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921); Advisory Council 1923-30
Personal:
1867-1930; b. Canada; MD Univ. Toronto 1890; Johns Hopkins Univ. (1894-1930; Prof. Medicine and Chief Physician, Johns Hopkins Hospital 1905-13; Emeritus) Pres.: Eugenics Research Association 1922, National Commission Mental Hygiene 1909-18
Pubns:
1916 The Clinical Diagnosis of Internal Diseases; 1927 The Young Man and Medicine
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 313; WSWIA; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Barker, Dr. Robert O.;
Member 1968
Personal:
1968 La Cresenta, California
Source: AESC 9/68
Barker, William;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Source: Osborne list
Barna, Gyorffy;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
1956 Institute of Genetics, Budapest, Hungary
Source: EQ 1956
Barnes, Prof. Jasper C.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Maryville, Tennessee 1925; Tennessee 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Barnhardt, John Hendly;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Barrows, Edward F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Rhode Island 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Barrows, Prof. W. M.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Biology and Zoology Bld., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, Ohio 1925; Ohio 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Barry, A.G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Wisconsin 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bartalos, Mihaly;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Scarsdale, New York; 225 East 79th St, New York City
Source: Osborne list
Bartholomew, Prof. E.
T.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Citrus Experimental Station, Riverside, California 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bartsch, Dr. Paul;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
U.S. National Museum, Washington, D.C. 1925; Washington D.C. 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Baruch, Bernard;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Basbor, Wilma;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bascom, Dr. Kellogg F.;
Member 1925
Personal:
2918 Idlewood Dr., Richmond, Virginia 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bass, George E.;
Member 1956
Personal:
1956 Ardmore, Pennsylvania; wife, Medora Bass q.v.
Source: EQ 1956; AESC
Bass, Medora Steegman;
Member 1974
Personal:
head of Planned Parenthood in Philadelphia; see George Bass
Publications:
1967 "Attitudes of Parents of Retarded Children Toward Voluntary Sterilization" Eugenics Quarterly, v. 14, 1; 1964 "Marriage, Parenthood, and Prevention of Pregnancy for the Mentally Deficient" Eugenics Quarterly, v. 11, 2
Source: Osborne list; AESC
Bassoe, Dr. Peter;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
1031 Michigan Ave., Evanston, Illinois 1925
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Bates, Rev. John M.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Red Cloud, Nebraska 1925; Nebraska 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Bates, Prof. Marston;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1906; d. 1974; m. Nancy Bell Fairchild 1939 ("Keeping House for a Biologist in Columbia" National Geographic Magazine, August 1948); United Fruit Company 1928-31 (Honduras, Guatemala); Harvard University PhD (zoology) 1934 " The Butterflies of Cuba"; Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology 1935; Rockefeller Foundation (1935, mosquitoes in Albania); Staff assistant, international health division 1937-50 (malaria in Egypt, yellow fever in Columbia); Postgraduate at Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health 1948; special assistant to the President 1950-52 (demographic problems from a biological viewpoint); Prof. of Zoology, Univ. of Michigan 1952-71; Pres., American Society of Naturalists 1961; Council on Foreign Relations; National Science Foundation (dir., cttee for biology and medicine 1952-); Society for the Study of Evolution
Publications:
1968 Gluttons and Libertines.; 1965 Natural History of Mosquitoes; 1963 Animal Worlds; 1960 The Forest and the Sea. ("a look at the economy of nature and the ecology of man" according to the front cover); The Darwin Reader. (ed.); 1955 The Prevalence of People. (on family planning and population from a Malthusian and Darwinian point of view); taught a course called "Zoology in Human Affairs" at U. Michigan (The Forest and the Sea); 1952 Where Winter Never Comes; 1950 The Nature of Natural History
Quotes:
Statement of the Eugenic Conservation Ethic:
"The problem of man's place in nature ... is the problem of the relations between man's developing culture and other aspects of the biosphere. ... This makes the split between the social and biological sciences particularly unfortunate. Economics and ecology ... as fields of knowledge ... are cultivated in remotely separated parts of our universities ... the humanities (have) long forgotten about nature ... Surely there is some way of putting all these things together ... The matter has some urgency ... we can create ... we can produce ... we have achieved ... control ... yet ... attempts to look at man's future are gloomy ... continuing warfare ... dizzy rate of population growth, and the exhaustion of resources ... we have lost the faith of the Eighteenth Century ... and the .. faith of the Nineteenth Century ... Man can't change the laws of cultural evolution or organic evolution ... but understanding the laws and acting with the laws he can influence the consequences ... the long term threat is the cancerous multiplication of the numbers of men ... we must make every effort to maintain diversity ... Science has undermined the dogmas and revelations ... a rationale for conduct ... will have to consider not only the problems of man's conduct with his fellow man, but also man's conduct toward nature ... we need to develop an ecological conscience" (The Forest and the Sea p. 250 -257)
Background:
-- Is there a gene for eugenics?
Eugenics is often advanced by families. For example, the Osborn family (Henry Fairfield Osborn, Fred Osborn, Fairfield Osborn, John Jay Osborn) is related to the Dodge family (Cleveland E. Dodge) and to Newell Brown. In England this tendency is very marked, especially in relation to the Darwin family. The Darwin are related to the Wedgwoods, the Huxleys, the Keynes (the family of John Maynard Keynes), the Langdon Downs (the family of the discoverer of Downs syndrome), the Brains, the Adrians, the Arthurs (the family of the doctor who starved to death John Pearson, a Downs syndrome baby), and the Barlows. According to Philip Bloom of the English Eugenics Society, the Darwins and other family grouping like them run England. (see Uncommon Families)
Similarly, Bates' wife was a descendant of Alexander Graham Bell, a family which has always been much involved in eugenics.
Alexander Bell himself supported eugenics. The National Geographic magazine is controlled by his descendants, the Grosvenors. The National Geographic has been advocating contraception as the solution for the problems of displaced native peoples for some time. In the December 1988 issue, it pledged itself to work what it calls "a better knowledge of geography".
But by "a better knowledge of geography" is meant eugenics as outlined above by Marston Bates. In "Will We Mend Our Earth" Gilbert Grosvenor explains that "the dark side of technology" comes from the number of people using it. He says that "electric lamps ... automobiles ... air conditioning ... refrigerators ... Their destructive impact has come with the surge in their popularity, in the world's bulging population ... ". But experts feel that the problems are not a cause for despair because "examples of success were cited frequently. China, once considered the vanguard of the population explosion, has curbed its growth to near replacement level." Grosvenor pledged to use National Geographic resources "to alert the public to the dangers outlined ... With all the tools at our disposal ...". Bates' wife was a granddaughter of Alexander Graham Bell
-- Schools of Public Health and Population Programs:
Population programs at school of public health "Such programs, shaped to train cadres, are not rare ... [in the population field] ... impact on government depended on the research programs, but long-term survival was largely determined by the development of teaching programs ... [the Univ. of Pennsylvania program] "is unique in that it has in recent years developed a specialization in Africa with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation" (1986 Caldwell, p. 155)
Source: EQ 1956; WWWIA; Current Biography
Batty, Mr. James;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Source: EQ 1956
Bauer, Donald;
Member 1938
Source: AESM, May 1938
Bauer, Harry L.;
Member 1956
Personal:
City College, Santa Monica, California 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Baughman, Mary B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Virginia 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Baxter, William G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bear, Mrs. C.U.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Michigan 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Beatty-DeSana, Jeanne
W.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Georgia Retardation Center, Cytogenetics Lab, Atlanta, Georgia 1974
Source: Osborne list
Beck, B.;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Svanevanget 32, Copenhagen, Denmark 1974
Source: Osborne list
Beck, Philip D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Beckman, Charles K.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Beckwith, Clyde G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bedford, Frederick H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Beer, Ethel S.;
Member 1956
Personal:
New York City 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Beiguelman, Dr.;
Member (Foreign) 1967
Personal:
Universidad de Campinas, Brazil 1967
Source: AESC 1967
Behre, Miss E. H.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Box 76, Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge, Louisiana 1925; Louisiana 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Belding, Milo M.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bell, Alexander Graham;
American Consultative Committee 1912-21; (Honorary President, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921)
Personal:
Inventor of the telephone
Source: Mehler, p. 37, note 3; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Bell, A. W.;
Member 1930, 1956
Personal:
California 1930; Los Angeles, California 1956
Source: Sanger list 1930; EQ 1956
Bell, Dr. J. Carlton;
Member 1925
Personal:
1032A Sterling Pl., Brooklyn, New York 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bellerose, Dorothee;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Belmont, August;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Background:
August Schonberg who renamed himself August Belmont was the representative of Rothschilds in America in the nineteenth century; he married Caroline Slidell Perry (dau. Commodore Matthew Perry who opened Japan to West; her uncle was Oliver Hazard Perry); Consul General to Austria which was placed close to Vienna House of Rothschilds; disliked by Henry Adams, an anti-Semite ("Belmont will lookin with five other Wall Street Jews to offer you won millione tollars to peat dose tam temocrats mit dier tam Pryan" sic (Letter to John Hay 1896 in The Protestant Establishment, E. Digby Baltzell, p. 92), Adams also said: "Our sway over what we call society is undisputed. We keep the Jews far away, and the anti-Jew feeling is quite rabid." ( quoted in The Protestant Establishment, E. Digby Baltzell, p. 93); his sons were August Belmont Jr., Oliver, Perry
Source: Sanger list 1930; Our Crowd, Steven Birmingham 1967
Bender, Lauretta;
Member 1974; Eugenics Quarterly/Social Biology M 1963
Personal:
Severna Park, Maryland 1974; 142 1/2 Monticello Ave., Annapolis, Maryland
Publications:
1963 "Mental Illness in Childhood and Heredity", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 10, 1
Source: Osborne list
Benedict, Ralph C.;
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
322 E. Eighth St., Brooklyn, New York 1925; Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, New York 1932
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Benfer, Robert A.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. Anthropology, Univ. Missouri, Columbia 1974
Source: Osborne list
Benjamin, Flora G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bennett, Kenneth;
Member 1976; Book editor, Social Biology, 1973 (2), 1975 & 1976 (all rev), 1980-1981, 1987; MR 1975-1980; was manuscript referee 1975-1980
Personal:
b. 1935; PhD 1967 (anthrop.) Univ. Arizona; Univ. Oregon 1967-70; Univ. Wisconsin, Madison (1970-(1976); Prof. Anthropology 1975-(76)); AAPA; Soc. Study Evolution; prehistoric osteology; biological anthropology; systematics and taxonomy; electrophoretic techniques in human populations;; evolutionary genetics;
Pubns:
was at Univ. Wisconsin w/ R.H. Osborne and did many book reviews for Social Biology incl. 1987 book review of Men in Groups by L. Tiger in Social Biology, v. 34, 1-2
Source: AMWS 1976; Social Biology acknowledgments 1975-1980
Bennett, Susan;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Benoist MD, Jean;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
b. 1929; Lyon, France; MD 1955 Univ. Lyon; DSc 1964 Univ. Paris; Univ. Montreal, Canada (ass't. prof. to prof. 1962-67; Prof. Anthropology 1967- (1976)); International Ass. Human Biol., Council; human genetics of "race crossing"; microevolution, espec. in small populations
Source: Osborne list
Bergen, Francis H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bergman, Prof. H. F.;
Member 1925; 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Hawaii, Honolulu 1925; Massachusetts 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Berman, Paul;
Member 1974
Personal:
Flushing, New York 1974
Source: Osborne list
Bernton, Dr. Harry Saul;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
b. 1884 Ireland; MD 1904 Harvard Univ.; Dir., Bender Hygienic Labs 1909-14; instr. pathology, Harvard 1915-17; George Washington Univ., Prof. Medical Jurisprudence 1919-24; Georgetown Univ., Washington, D.C. 1919-51 (Lect., Hygiene 1919-21; Prof. 1929-51); 1925 address: 2013 O. St., Washington, D.C.; allergist
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA 1925
Berolzheimer, Ruth;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Berwind, Mrs. John E.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bianchine, Josette;
Member 1974
Personal:
Columbus, Ohio 1974
Source: Osborne list
Bichel, Dr. Jorgen;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
MD; Institute for General Pathology, University of Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Biddle, Mrs. Mary Duke;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930; heiress to tobacco fortune; married Anthony Drexel Biddle; her brother married A.D. Biddle's sister
Background:
Doris Duke, daughter of American Tobacco founder, who left her $1.2 billion estate to Bernard Lafferty either directly or in a foundation endowment, foundation to be run by the butler. Lafferty was a former maitre d' at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel, Philadelphia. He is 49. In court papers he is accused of excessive drug and alcohol use, frequenting homosexual bathhouses and book stores, and using fraud and undue influence to get will signed. A nurse alleges that Doris Duke's death "was caused by a fatal dose of morphine administered by Duke's doctor, Charles F. Kivowitz" on Oct. 28, 1993. (PI, March 6, 1995, p. A2) The will was signed in March of 1993 with the lawyer guiding her hand according to affidavits. Then it was redone April 5, 1993. The witnesses included Kivowitz. The affidavits say Duke was disoriented and gaunt in her last year. ("Duke aides say heiress was disoriented", PI, March 6, 1995, p. A2)
In 1933 Doris Duke was said to be the richest girl in the world since she inherited James B. Duke's tobacco fortune.
She married James H.R. Cromwell, son of Mrs. E.T. Stotesbury (wife of the senior Morgan partner in Philadelphia
Nicholas Biddle was president of the Bank of the United States at the beginning of the 19th century. After his retirement the Bank accused him of embezzling $400,000 dollars in 1836, a theft which it was alleged he concealed by fraudulent entries, burning of vouchers and other methods. He died before the case came to trail.
Source: Sanger list 1930; History of the Great American Fortunes, Gustavas Myers 1907 (1936) p. 557 (Biddle), p. 704 (Duke); America's Sixty Families, Ferdinand Lundberg, Vanguard 1937 p. 11-12 (Duke, Biddle)
Bierman, Shirley C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Background:
Dr. William Bierman, 200 Madison Ave., New York City (Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921) ?? relative??
Source: Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Bigelow, Frederick Southgate;
Advisory Council 1923-35;
Member 1930
Personal:
1871-1954; assoc. editor, Saturday Evening Post (SEP) 1899-1929; supported immigration restriction and caused articles on this topic to appear in SEP 1920-40; for many years was member of board of managers of the Hospitals of the Graduate School of Medicine, Univ. Pennsylvania
Background:
-- Maurice Bigelow: President, American Eugenics Society 1940-45; ??relative??
-- Dr. William S. Bigelow, 56 Beacon St., Boston, Massachusetts; Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921; ??relative??
Source: Sanger list 1930; Mehler, p. 314; WSWIA v. 2; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921; AES list
Bigelow, Prof. Robert
Payne;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
b. 1863; d. 1955; PhD 1892 Johns Hopkins; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Cambridge, Massachusetts (1893-1933, Emeritus 1933; Prof. Zoology and Parasitology 1922-33); Librarian, Marine Biology Lab, Woods Hole 1919-23
-- son: Robert Otis Bigelow
Pubns:
Directions for Dissections of the Cat 1925 (rev. ed. 1935)
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA
Biggs MD, Dr. Herman;
(General Cttee, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921); Advisory Council 1923
Personal:
1871-1954; MD Bellevue Hospital Medical College 1883; Rockefeller Institute of Medical Research (Director 1901); founded municipal health clinic; helped found anti-tuberculosis movement; associated with Rockefeller Foundation throughout his life; Pres.: American Social Hygiene Assn., National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis
Background:
endorsed Margaret Sanger's victory in Woman Rebel case
Source: Mehler, p. 314-15; Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America, Ellen Chesler, 1992, p. 147; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Billings, Frank;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Billings, Pauline;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Binder, Dr. Rudolph M.;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
New York 1930; 279 Prospect St., East Orange, New Jersey 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Bingham, E.A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
North Carolina 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bingham, Harry P.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Background:
Dr. Anne T. Bingham, 2 Grammercy Park, New York City 1921; Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921; ??relative??
Source: Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Bingham 2nd, William;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maine 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bioletti, Prof. Frederic
T.;
Member 1925
Personal:
1865-(1961-1968); Univ. of California, Berkeley (MS Agr 1898; viticulture (wine vines); Prof. Viticulture 1913-35
Source: 1925 list; WWWIA
Biology Dept. New York Univ.,
NYC;
Member 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bisch, Dr. Louis Edward;
Member 1956
Personal:
1885-1963; MD, PhD Columbia Univ. 1911, 1912; Psychopathic Lab, New York City (Organizer and Director 1916; see Katherine Davis q.v.); Mental Hygiene Clinic, Norfolk, VA 1918-19; Prof. of Neuropsychiatry, New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital 1926-63; Member: Eugenics Research Assn., American Psychiatric Assn., American Anthropological Assn.
Publications:
1945 Your Nerves
Source: EQ 1956, WWWIA
Bishop, Cortlandt F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bishop, Dr. Louis B.;
Member 1930, 1956
Personal:
450 Bradford St., Pasadena, California 1925, 1932; California 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Bishop, Mabel Lowell;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maryland 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bixler, Miss Elizabeth
S.:
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
62 Park St., New Haven, Connecticut 1925; Connecticut 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Blackader, Dr. A. D.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Montreal, Canada 1925
Source: 1925 list
Blackmar, Frank W.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Kansas 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blacksheer, Alfreda D.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Nashville, Tennessee 1974
Source: Osborne list
Blagden, George;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blake, Mrs. Lillian K.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blakeslee, Dr. Albert
Francis;
(Member, Second International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1921); Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932); (Member, Eugenics Research Association 1938)
Personal:
1874-1954; PhD Harvard 1904; Carnegie Station for Experimental Evolution, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, New York (1901-02, 1912-41; Summer School 1901- 02; Plant Genetics (1915-41; asst. dir to Dir. 1928-36, Dir. 1936-41); Smith College (Genetics Exp. Station, Dir. 1943-54); Trustee, Biological Abstracts 1931-46; American Society of Human Genetics v.p. 1954; American Society of Naturalists (Pres. 1930); American Gen. Assn., Genetic Soc. America
-- brother; C.H. Blakeslee; Fletcher, Prof. 1933-43; Council on Foreign Relations
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; ERA list; AJHG 1954; WSWIA; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Blasing, Jack;
Member 1930
Personal:
Wisconsin 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blattler, D. Paul;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. of Chemistry, Bioscience Laboratories, 7600 Tyrone Ave., Van Nuys, California 1974
Publications:
1975 " Intellect and Serum Uric Acid: An Optimal Concentration of Serum Urate for Human Learning", Social Biology, v. 22, 3
Source: Osborne list
Blattner, Peggy;
Member 1974
Personal:
Scarsdale, New York 1974
Source: Osborne list
Bley, C.F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blodgett, Mrs. John Wood;
Advisory Council 1927-30
Personal:
b. Lowell, Massachusetts, Minnie A. Cumnock; d. 1930; on Advisory Council 1927-35 but listed as dead in 1931 in husband's biography., dead in 1930 acc. to WWWIA; not on Sanger list
-- m. John Blodgett; Michigan lumberman; Lumber Manufacturer's Assn. (Pres. 1923)
-- daughter was Mrs. Morris Hadley q.v.
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 315; WWWIA
Bloom, Dr. David;
Member 1956
Personal:
MD; New York City 1956; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954
Source: EQ 1956, Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Bloomingdale, Hiram C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Blum, Dr. Theodore;
Member 1925
Personal:
140 West 57th St., New York City 1925
Source: 1925 list
Blumel, Dr. Johanna;
Member 1956
Personal:
MD; Galveston, Texas 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Blumenthal, George;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bodenhafer, Walter B.;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Missouri 1930; Washington Univ., St. Louis, Missouri 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Bogardus, Prof. Emory
S.;
Advisory Council 1927-35
Personal:
1882-1973; PhD Univ. Chicago 1911; Univ. Southern California (Prof. Sociology 1915-49, (organizer and first chairman of department of sociology), Emeritus; Social Work Division, Dir. 1920-37; Dean 1937-39); American Soc. Soc. (Pres. 1931); All Nations Foundation, Trustee 1940-55; The Explorer, 1962 (autobiog)
Pubns:
1967 A Forty Year Racial Distance Study; 1964 Towards a World Community; editor, Journal of Sociology and Social Work 1916-61; 1951 The Making of Public Opinion; 1950 (4th ed.) Fundamentals of Social Psychology 1928 Immigration and Racial Attitudes; Introduction to Sociology (many editions); 1922 (1913 1st edition) Introduction to the Social Sciences
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 315; WWWIA v. 7
Boies, Mrs. David;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Boleslaw, Goldman;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Acting Head, Cytogenetics Institute, Tel-Hashomer Hospital, Ramat-Gan, Israel 1974
Source: Osborne list
Bolley, Dean Henry L.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Agricultural College, North Dakota 1925; North Dakota 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Bolton, Edna;
Member 1937
Source: AESM 1937
Bonaventure, F.A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Ohio 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bonna, Batsheva;
Member (Foreign) 1967, 1974
Personal:
Dept. of Genetics, Tel Hashoma Hospital, Tel Aviv 1967
Publications:
1973 "Reproduction and Inbreeding Among the Samaritans", Social Biology, v. 20, 1
Source: AESC 1967; Osborne list
Book, Jan - Consulting Editor, 1963,
1968;
Member 1974
Personal:
MD; Consulting editor, Eugenics Quarterly, 1963, 1968; Institute for Medical Genetics, Uppsala, Sweden, 1974; State Institute for Human Genetics, Uppsala, Sweden 1956
Publications:
1959 "Fertility Trends in Some Types of Mental Defects", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 6, 2; 1955 "Heredity Counseling. Medical Genetics and Counseling Practices", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 2, 3
Background:
In the Twenties, Dag Hammarskold's father and the Rector of the Karolinska Institute (awards Nobel Prizes) helped found a state institute of race biology in Uppsala. In 1956 Kurt Hirschhorn received a fellowship from the Population Council to study at the State Institute for Human Genetics, Uppsala, Sweden under Jan Book. Whether these two Institutes are the same is an area where research is needed. Another area is the question of the influence of Dag Hammarskold's father and brother on the European Court at the Hague; and the interplay of this with Swedish (not to say Nordic) race biology.
Source: EQ 1963, 1968; Osborne list; Population Council Annual Report 1956
Bookstaber, Philip
David;
Member 1930
Personal:
Pennsylvania 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Borden, Howard S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bosenbury, Charles S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Indiana 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bouchard Jr., Thomas J.
- see under directors
Bourne, George L.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Boutros, Susan N.;
Member 1974
Publications:
Limestone, New York 1974
Source: Osborne list
Bowditch MD, Dr. Harold; (Member &
General Cttee, Second International Congress
of Eugenics, New York 1921); Advisory Council
1923;
Member 1930
Personal:
1883-1964; MD Harvard 1909; private medical practice Boston and Brookline Massachusetts 1912-1958 (Did he know John Rock who was also in Brookline?); 1921 address: 44 Harvard Ave., Brookline; Boston Univ. Medical School, asst. prof. medicine; Unitarian; old stock
Source: Sanger list 1930; Mehler, p. 316; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Bowditch, Ingersoll;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bowman, Ethel;
Member 1925
Personal:
Goucher College, Baltimore, Maryland 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bowman, John;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Boyden, Alan;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
New Jersey 1930; Stelton, New Jersey 1932
Source: Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Boyden, Mabel Gregg;
Member 1956
Personal:
b. 1899; Rutgers Univ. (Dept. of Zoology 1925-68, Lect., Bureau Biological Research 1950-68); Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954
Source: EQ 1956, AMWS 12th Ed., Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Bradley, Richards M.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bragg, Miss Laura M.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Charlestown Museum, Charlestown, South Carolina 1925; South Carolina 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Branch, Hazel E.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Kansas 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brand, Jean;
Member 1974
Personal:
Arlington, Virginia 1974
Source: Osborne list
Breitwieser, J.V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
North Dakota 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brem, Walter;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bretnall, Prof. G. H.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Baldwin City, Kansas 1925
Source: 1925 list
Brewster, Edwin T.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brewster, Frederick F.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brewster, George S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bridges, Mr. Horace J.;
Member 1925
Personal:
163 W. Washington St., Chicago, Illinois 1925
Source: 1925 list
Briggs, George;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Briggs, Olive;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brigham, Dr. Carl
Campbell;
Member 1925, 1930; Advisory Council 1927-35; (Member, Eugenics Research Association 1938)
Personal:
1890-1943; PhD Princeton Univ. 1916; 1917 junior member of R. Yerkes (q.v.) Army Testing Group; Princeton Univ. (1920-43; Prof. Psychology 1928-43); worked on immigration; Member Galton Society, Eugenics Research Association
Pubns:
1930 "Intelligence Tests of Immigrant Groups", Psychological Review, v. 37 (discussed in The Mismeasurement of Man; 1923 A Study of American Intelligence, Princeton Univ. Press ("lent scientific credibility to the work of Madison Grant and Charles Gould" Mehler p. 316; Grant was a follower of Count Gobineau; Brigham is currently being used by Murray in The Bell Curve to lend scientific credibility to a new version of Gobineau's theories advanced by the Aryan eggheads, a group concentrated on the anthropological journal, Mankind Quarterly); 1917 Two Studies in Mental Tests
Source: 1925 list; Eugenics Feb., 1929; Sanger list 1930; ERA list 1938; Mehler, p. 316; WWWIA
Brigham, Reed O.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Ohio 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brill, A.A.;
Member 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
New York 1930; 1 West 70th St., New York City 1932; European Freudian analyst; 1925 attended Sixth International Neo Malthusian Conference on Birth Control, sponsored by American Birth Control League
Source: Sanger list 1930; Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America, Ellen Chesler, 1992, p. 236; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Brink, B. Dean;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brissenden, Jane;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 1974
Source: Osborne list
Britton, Mr. Norman N.;
Member 1925
Personal:
341 Powers Bld., Rochester, New York 1925
Source: 1925 list
Brode, Prof. H. S.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Walla Walla, Washington 1925; Washington 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Brokaw, Clifford V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bronson, Miss Margaret
L.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
438 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Connecticut 1925; Connecticut 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Bronstein, Philip G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Massachusetts 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brooks, Florence V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brooks, Frank G.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Oklahoma 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brooks, Mrs. Helen
Clark;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
31 Prospect St., Cortland, New York 1925; New York 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Brooks, Howard L.;
Member 1956
Personal:
Glen Ridge, New Jersey 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Brooks, Prof. Shelagh;
Member 1974, 1976, 1989
Personal:
b. 1923 Mexico; PhD (Phys. Anthrop) 1951, Univ. California, Berkeley; Prof. of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas 1969-(1976); "analysis and verification of historical burials"
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1976; AMWS 1989
Brosseau Jr., George E.;
Member 1974
Personal:
National Science Foundation 1974
Source: Osborne list
Brousseau, Kate;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Adelaide;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Edgar;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maryland 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Dean George
Lincoln;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
1869-1957; PhD Univ. Chicago 1902; South Dakota State College (Prof. Mathematics 1897-1944, Dean 1910-44, Pres. 1940- 41)
-- his son, George Lincoln Brown Jr.
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA
Brown, Franklin Q.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Frederick;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, G. VanAmber;
Member 1930
Personal:
Michigan 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Herbert J.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maine 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Kenneth S.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Potomac, Maryland 1974
Source: Osborne list
Brown, Mrs. Newell;
Member 1956
Personal:
1956, 4923 Hillbrook Lane, Washington, D.C., N. W.; daughter of Frederick Osborn; Newell Brown was a member of the Eisenhower administration
Source: EQ 1956
Brown, Orton B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Hampshire 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown MD, Dr. Philip K.; Advisory
Council 1923-35;
Member 1930
Personal:
1869-1940; MD Harvard 1893; studied in Europe; founder, Arequipa Sanatorium, San Francisco for tubercular working women
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 317
Brown, Roy Eugene;
Member 1930
Personal:
North Carolina 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brown, Royal L.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Riverside, California 1974
Source: Osborne list
Brown, Dr. William H.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Bureau of Science, Manila, Philippines 1925; Hawaii 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Brownson, Dr. Bradley;
Member 1956
Personal:
MD; San Mateo Clinic, San Mateo, California 1956; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954; relation of Marston Bates q.v.
Source: EQ 1956; Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Bruce, Kathleen;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maryland 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Brues, Alice M.;
Member 1974
Personal:
b. 1913 Boston; BA 1933 Bryn Mawr; PhD 1940 (physical anthropology) Harvard; Univ. Oklahoma School of Medicine (ass't to Prof. Anatomy 1946-65); Univ. Colorado, Boulder (Prof. Anthropology 1965-(1976); Am Assn. Physical Anthrop. (Pres. 1971); ASHG; "race formation" (AMWS 1976)
Pubns:
1963 "Stochastic tests of selection in the ABO blood group", Am. J. Physical Anthropology, v. 21. p. 287; 1954 "Selection and Polymorphism in the ABO blood group", Am. J. Physical Anthropology, v. 12, p. 559
Source: Osborne list
Bruins, J. W.;
Member (Foreign) 1956
Personal:
1956 Nederlands Anthropogenetische Vereniging, Deventer, Netherlands; 1954 Member, American Society of Human Genetics
Publications:
1949 Huwelijkskeus en nageslacht
Source: EQ 1956; Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Bruner, Prof. H. L.;
Member 1925
Personal:
324 South Ritter Ave., Indianapolis, Indiana 1925
Source: 1925 list
Brunner, E. DeS.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bruno, Mrs. Virginia
Field;
Member 1956
Personal:
Los Angeles, California 1956; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954
Source: EQ 1956, Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Bruun, Charles A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Arkansas 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bryan Jr., Edwin H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Hawaii 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bryan, Prof. W. E.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Arizona, Tucson 1925; Arizona 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Bryant, William M.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Providence, Rhode Island 1925
Source: 1925 list
Buchholz, Prof. John T.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
1888-1951; PhD Univ. Chicago 1917; Cold Spring Harbor; m. Olive Peterson 1912; Univ. Arkansas (Prof. Botany, head of Dept. 1919-26); Univ. Illinois, Urbana (Prof. Botany 1929-); Cold Spring Harbor, visiting investigator, summers 1921-41; Bot. Soc. Am., (Pres. 1941); genetics of datura, heredity of polyploids
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; WWWIA (3)
Budd, Alfred W.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bulkley, Edwin M.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bumpus, Dr. Hermon C.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Duxbury, Massachusetts 1925; Massachusetts 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Burdette, Mrs. Robert
J.;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Burdick, C. Lalor;
Member 1974
Personal:
1974 Lalor Foundation, Wilmington, Delaware; E. I. Dupont Inc.
Source: Osborne list
Burger, Erman W.;
Member 1956, 1974
Personal:
Brooklyn, New York 1956; Syosset, NY 1974
Source: EQ 1956; Osborne list
Burleson, Mrs. John K.;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Burling, Mrs. Edward;
Member 1925
Personal:
2408 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D.C. 1925; Washington D.C. 1930; Covington, Burling and Rublee, see Dorothy Brush q.v. for Rublee; Covington and Burling represented Noah Slee, Margaret Sanger's husband, is his IRS case (1926-29). Slee argued unsuccessfully that his contributions to the American Birth Control League should be tax deductible but in the end had to make a $40,000 payment to the IRS. This gives an idea of the size of his contributions to the birth control movement. The IRS argued that the League was engaged in politics; Covington and Burling also suggested that Sen. Henry Drury Hatfield introduce a birth control bill in 1932
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; Woman of Valor: Margaret Sanger and the Birth Control Movement in America, Ellen Chesler, 1992 p. 317, 330
Burlingame, L.I.;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Burlingame, Prof. L. L.;
Member 1925; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
Stanford Univ., California 1925, 1932
Source: 1925 list; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Burlingham, Miss Gertrude
S.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
556 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, New York 1925; New York 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Burr, Clinton S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Burr, Dr. Charles W. MD; (Subscriber,
Second International Congress of Eugenics,
New York 1921);
Member 1926, 1930; Advisory Council 1928-35; (Sustaining Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
1861-1944; b. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; MD Univ. Penn 1886; studied Berlin and Vienna; Philadelphia General Hospital, Chief psychiatric service 1896-1931; Univ. Penn, Prof. mental disease 1901-31, Emeritus 1931; Orthopedic Infirmary for Nervous Diseases 1911-40; 1918 Spruce St. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1921; 1528 Pine St., Philadelphia 1932; specialist in criminally insane; expert witness in murder trials; Pres.: Eugenics Research Assn. 1925, American Neurological Soc. 1908; Episcopalian (acc. to Mehler), Quaker (acc. to WSWIA); unmarried
Pubns:
Textbook of Nervous Disease (Am Ed.)
Source: AESM June 1926; Eugenics, Feb. 1929; Sanger list 1930; Mehler, p. 318; WSWIA v. 2; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Burr, George H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Burt, Prof. Edward A.;
Member 1925
Personal:
4542 Tower Grove Pl., St. Louis, Missouri 1925
Source: 1925 list
Bush, Irving T.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Bush, Dr. W. T.;
Member 1925
Personal:
Columbia Univ., New York City 1925
Source: 1925 list
Butler, James;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Butzel, Prof. Henry M.;
Member 1974
Personal:
Biochemical Genetics, Union College, Schenectady, New York 1974
Source; Osborne list
Byrn, Darcie;
Member 1956
Personal:
State College, Pennsylvania 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Byrnes, Esther F.; (Member, Second
International Congress of Eugenics, New York
1921);
Member 1930
Personal:
193 Jefferson Ave., New York City 1921; New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Cadien, James D.;
Member 1974, 1976
Personal:
b. 1941; PhD (anthropology) 1965, Univ. California, Berkeley; Case Western Reserve, Cleveland, Ohio 1969-73; Univ. Arizona, Tucson, ass't. prof. anthropology 1973-(1976); Am. Assn. Physical Anthropology; dental work
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1976
Caldwell, Erskine;
Member 1930
Personal:
Maine 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Caldwell, I.S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Georgia 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Caldwell, John C.;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Dept. of Demography, Australian National University, Canberra 1974
Pubns:
1986 Limiting Population Growth and the Ford Foundation; 1977 "The Role of Marital Sexual Abstinence in Determining Fertility: A Study of the Yoruba in Nigeria", Population Studies, v. 31, #2, p. 277; 1976 "Towards a Restatement of Demographic Transition Theory", Population and Development Review, v. 2, #3-4, p. 321-366; 1970 A Manual for Surveys of Fertility and Family Planning: Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practice, Population Council
Background:
-- Malthus and Political Economy:
Thomas Malthus was Prof. of Political Economy in the East India Company's College at Haileybury (1805-1834). "and he and his successors ensured that generations of British officials and scholars in India saw that country's society in Malthusian terms as is evidenced by every Indian Census Report until 1951 (the one that was presented with great effectiveness to the 1954 World Population Conference in Rome)" John Caldwell, Limiting Population Growth and the Ford Foundation, p. 4; Many Indians were members of the English Eugenics Society, including Siripati Chandrasekhar, head of the Indian Statistical Institute (see list of English Eugenics Society members) while Lady Rama Rau was associated with the Indian Eugenics Association (1986 Caldwell, p. 39)
-- Into the Darkness - Coercion
"Indeed the ultimate problem for the West is how closely it is prepared to associate with family planning programs that are not merely efficient but also coercive" (1986 Caldwell, p. 139)
Source: Osborne list
Caldwell, J.H.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Indiana 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Caldwell, Prof. Otis W.;
Member 1925, 1930; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932)
Personal:
425 West 123rd St., New York City 1925; New York 1930; 433 West 123rd St., New York City 1932
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Calkins, F.C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Washington D.C. 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Callender, W.R.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Rhode Island 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Camp Jr., Colonel Frank
R.;
Member 1968, 1974
Personal:
1974 Louisville Blood Bank Center, American Red Cross, Louisville, Kentucky; 1968; Army Medical Research Lab, Ft. Knox, Kentucky
Source: AESC 12/68; Osborne list
Campbell, Arthur A.;
Member 1964; Eugenics Quarterly/Social Biology M 1965, 1973; MR 1975, 1976, 197
Personal:
Natality Statistics, DHEW 1964
Publications:
Family Planning, Sterility, and Population Growth w/ R. q.v. and P. K. Whelpton q.v., McGraw-Hill, New York; 1965 "Fertility and Family Planning Among Nonwhite Married Couples in the United States", Eugenics Quarterly, v. 12, 3
Source: AESC, Contrib. from Members File 1964
Campbell, Pres. William
Wallace;
Advisory Council 1925-35
Personal:
1862-1938; astronomer; spectrographic studies of gaseous nebulae; Pres., University of California 1923-30; AAAS (Pres. 1915); National Academy of Science (Pres. 1931); suicide 1938; old stock (Scottish)
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 318- 19
Campbell, Mr. and Mrs.
Ward;
Member 1930
Personal:
Missouri 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cannon, Prof. Walter Bradford MD;
Advisory Council 1923-30
Personal:
1871-1945; MD Harvard 1900; family from Ulster in 1718; Harvard Univ. (1899- 1945; instr. to prof. 1899-1906; George Higginson Prof. Physiology 1906-42, Emeritus 1942-45); AAAS (Pres. 1939); AES Cttee on Eugenics and Dysgenics of Birth Control; Rockefeller Institute attacked by anti-vivisectionists, Cannon appointed by AMA to head Defense Committee (1908-28); taught Peking Union Medical College 1935; co-founder, Medical Bureau to Aid Spanish Democracy, American-Soviet Medical Society, Bureau for Medical Aid to China; assisted in rescue of scientists from Nazis; old stock (Ulster)
Pubns:
1945 The Way of an Investigator; 1915 Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger and Fear; 1911 Mechanical Factors of Digestion; developed concept of "homeostasis", use of x-rays in gastroenterology; studied physiological function of "suprarenal gland" and how the "sympathetic nerves" release noradrenaline and adrenaline
Background:
Cannon's work almost won the Nobel prize in physiology. He showed how the response to emotion is, in the body, connected with hormones. This work connected up with that of Sherrington and Adrian who did win the Nobel prize. But it also connects up with Margaret Sanger and her statements that whoever controls 'internal secretions' controls the world. This work also connects up with the mysterious Auschwitz experiments on twins which involved isolation and fear or "stress" (see von Verschuer q. v.) Finally it connects with Pincus who worked first on adrenocortical hormones (see Aviation Medicine articles in World War II) and then on birth control pills.
When I say connects, I mean, is intellectually linked.
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 319- 20; WWWIA
Canoy, Jefferson M.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Tennessee 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cantrill, Simeon T.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New Hampshire 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cardiff, Ira D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Washington 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Carlson, Prof. Anton
Julius;
Member 1956
Personal:
1875-1956; b. Sweden; PhD (physiology) Stanford 1903; research associate, Carnegie Institute 1903-04; Univ. of Chicago (Dept. of Physiology, associate professor to chairman of physiology department 1904-40; Emeritus); Consultant to FDA, US Public Health Service; Lecturer in China for Rockefeller Foundation 1935; National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, March of Dimes (medical and research cttees); Humanist of the Year 1953; Pres: National Society for Medical Research, Research Council on Problems of Alcohol, American Biology Society, American Physiological Society, Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB), Institute of Medicine, American Gerontological Society; Member, American Society of Human Genetics 1954; National Committee Against Conscription (World War II)
Publications:
Control of Hunger in Health and Disease.; The Machinery of the Body. 1937 (5th Ed 1961); The Nature of the World and Man; many articles in American Journal of Physiology starting in 1904; in 1939 he began to write on aging; 1952 Annals of the American Academy of Political Science SS, 279, 18; 1953 Science 117, 701 (this article was cited by F. J. Kallmann q.v. in Am J. of Psychiatry R, 110, 489, 1954)
Source: EQ 1956; Science Citation Index, WWWIA, Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954; Current Biography 1948
Carpentier, Peter
Julius;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Berchem, Belgium 1974
Source: Osborne list
Carroll, Robert S.;
Member 1930
Personal:
North Carolina 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Carstens, Mr. Christian Carl;
(Member, Second International Congress of
Eugenics, New York 1921); Advisory Council
1927-35;
Member 1930
Personal:
1865-1939; PhD Univ. Pennsylvania 1903; Charity Organization Society (Philadelphia, Asst. Sec 1896-99; New York, Asst. Sec. 1900-03); Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children (Massachusetts, Gen. Sec. 1907-20); 1921 address: 130 E. 22nd St. New York City 1921; White House Conference on Child Health and Protection (Chmn., Sect on Handicapped Children 1929); according to Mehler, Carstens believed a child was " first of all a member of the community in which his family has legal residence. He or she is entitled to such services as exist in that community..." (Mehler, p. 321)
Source: Eugenics Feb., 1929; Mehler, p. 320; Sanger list 1930; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Carter, Dr. Bayard;
Member 1956
Personal:
MD; Duke University Hospital 1956
Source: EQ 1956
Carter, Mrs. C. Shelby;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Carter, Hugh;
Member 1974
Personal:
2039 New Hampshire Ave. NW, Washington, DC 1974
Source: Osborne list
Carter, Thomas C.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Oklahoma 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cartledge, Mr. J. Lincoln; (Member,
Second International Congress of Eugenics,
New York 1921);
Member 1925
Personal:
1921 address: Pittsburgh; 203 Biology Hall, Univ. of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 1925
Source: 1925 list; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921
Carus, Mrs. Mary;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Carver, Prof. G. L.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Mercer Univ., Macon, Georgia 1925; Georgia 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Carver, Prof. Thomas Nixon; Advisory
Council 1925-35;
Member 1930
Personal:
1865-1961; Harvard Univ., Prof. of Political Economy 1902-34; PhD 1894 Cornell Univ.; taught at John Hopkins 1891-93; m. Frances Kirkendall; Oberlin Univ. Prof. Economics 1894-1900; Harvard Univ. (1900-; Prof. Political Economy 1902-34, Emeritus 1934)
Publications:
The Religion Worth Having 1911; Essays in Social Justice 1915; Principles of Political Economy 1919; Elementary Economics 1920; Principles of National Economics; The Essential Factors of Social Evolution 1935; How Can There Be Full Employment After the War? 1945; weekly articles in Los Angeles Times 1954-61
Source: Sanger list 1930; Mehler, p. 321; WWWIA
Cary, Dr. Charles;
Member 1925
Personal:
340 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, New York 1925
Source: 1925 list
Case, Prof. E. C.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1925; Michigan 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Cassidy, Rosalind;
Member 1930
Personal:
California 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Castle, Prof. William E.; **American
Consultative Committee 1912-21; (Member,
Second International Congress of Eugenics,
New York 1921); Advisory Council
1923-29;
Member 1930, 1946; (Member, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York 1932); (Member, Eugenics Research Association 1938)
Personal:
1867-1962; Bussey Institute, Harvard University (Jamaica Plain) during most of career (PhD Harvard 1893); co- founder, American Breeders Assn. 1903; American Soc. Naturalists (Pres. 1919); old stock
Publications:
1951 "The Beginnings of Mendelism in America", in Genetics in the Twentieth Century: Essays on the Progress of Genetics during Its First Fifty Years, (ed.) L. C. Dunn, New York; 1930 "Race Mixture and Physical Disharmonies", Science, v. 71, June 13; 1916 (4th Ed 1930) Genetics and Eugenics; important teacher; 1911 Heredity in Relation to Evolution and Animal Breeding; his students included G. Pincus
Source: Mehler, p. 37, note 3; Eugenics 1929; Sanger list 1930; EN 1946 December p. 51; ERA list 1938; Mehler p. 321, 453; Report of The Second International Congress of Eugenics 1921; A Decade of Progress in Eugenics, Baltimore 1934
Cathers, Erdine;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cattell, Prof. Raymond
Bernard;
Member 1956; English Eugenics Society Member 1936, 1937
Personal:
b. England, 1905; personality theorist; psychological assessment
English career:
educ. Kings College, London (BS, MA, PhD, Dsc); director, Leicester Child Guidance Clinic 1932-37; Darwin Research Fellow of the Eugenics Society 1935 American career:
Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts 1939-41; Lect. in Psychology, Harvard University 1941-43; Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, Research Professor of Psychology 1945-74, Emeritus 1974-; University of Hawaii; Wenner Gren Prize, New York Academy of Science; Member: Eugenics Society (England), Human Eugenics Society, American Psychological Assn., American Society of Human Genetics 1954, British Psychological Assn., Psychonomic Society, Society Multivariate Experiential Psychology (first President)
Publications: (italicized publications were cited in The Bell Curve
1936-37, "Is our national intelligence declining?", ER, v. 28., p. 181; 1937 The Fight For Our National Intelligence; 1936-37 "Views on race and eugenics: propaganda or science?", ER, v. 28, p. 335, (C); 1936 Guide to Mental Testing; 1937-38, "Some further relations between intelligence, fertility and socio- economic factors", ER, v. 29, p. 171; 1938 "Some changes in social life in a community with a falling intelligence quotient", British Journal of Psychology, v. 28; 1944-45, "Intelligence and fertility: a plea for research", ER, v. 36, p. 126; 1950-51, "The fate of national intelligence; test of a thirteen year old prediction", ER, v. 42, p. 136; 1950 Personality, A Systematic Study; 1961 The Meaning and Measurement of Neuroticism and Anxiety; 1963 "The Nature and Measurement of Anxiety", Scientific American, March, 1963, p. 96; 1965 The Scientific Analysis of Personality.; 1966 Handbook of Multivariate Experimental Psychology; 1968 Prediction of Achievement and Creativity; 1971 Abilities: Their Structure, Growth and Action; 1974 "Differential Fertility and normal selection for IQ: Some required conditions in their investigation", Social Biology, v. 21; 1979 "Are culture fair intelligence tests possible and necessary?", Journal of Research and Development in Education, v. 12; 1979-80 Personality and Learning Theory. 2 Vol., His most important work. It integrates aspects of personality in a theory of development; 1983 Intelligence and National Achievement, Institute for the Study of Man (Pioneer Fund beneficiary); 1987 Beyondism: Religion from Science
Background:
Beyondism Foundation:
1993 Rep. Cardiss Collins asserted that the NCAA Data Analysis Group was using members of the Beyondism Foundation to develop eligibility standards. The Foundation is based on R. B. Cattell's ideas. Rep. Collins quoted Cattell as saying: "Probably, a positive eugenic condition could be most simply established by an ethic of more children from the socially more successful." The story was covered on the sports pages. (Washington Post, 12/15/93, p. C-2)
Source: EQ 1956; Science Citation Index; WSWIA 1990; "Raymond B(ernard) Cattell" Encyclopedia Britannica 15th edition; Membership list, American Society of Human Genetics, AJHG 1954
Caulfield, H. P.;
Member 1938
Source: AESM, May 1938
Cavalli-Sforza, Luigi
L.;
Member 1974; Eugenics Quarterly/Social Biology M 1981
Personal:
Dept. of Genetics, Stanford Univ. Medical Center, California 1974, 1993; American Society of Human Genetics (Pres., 1989)
Publications:
1993 "Demic expansions and human evolution" w/ P. Menozzi and A. Paizza, Science, v. 265, Jan. 29, p. 639; 1992 "Coevolution of genes and language revisited", w/ J. Mountain, E. Minch, Proc. National Academy of Science, Jun. 15, v. 89 (12), p. 5620; 1991 "Drift, Admixture and Selection in Human Evolution: a study of DNA Polymorphisms", Proc. National Academy of Science, Feb. 1, v. 88 (3), p. 839; 1991 "Genes, Peoples and Languages", Scientific American, v. 265, Nov., p. 104; 1989 "Genetic and Linguistic Evolution", w/ A. Piazza, P. Menozzi, J. Mountain; letter to Science, June 9, v. 244 (4909) p. 1128; 1988 "Reconstruction of Human Evolution: Bringing Together Genetic, Archaeological and Linguistic Data", w/ A. Piazzi, P. Menozzi, and J. Mountain, Proc. National Academy of Science, August, v. 85 (16), p. 6002]; 1987 African Pygmies.; 1987 "Migration rates of human populations from surname distributions", Nature, Oct. 22-28, v. 329 (6141):714-6 w/ A. Moroni q.v. and others; 1987 "Insulin-like growth factors in Pygmies: the role of puberty in determining final stature" w/ T. Merimee, J. Zapf, B. Hewlett, NEJM, April 9, p. 906; 1986 "Detecting linkage for genetically heterogeneous diseases and detecting heterogeneity with linkage data" w/ Mary Clare King, AJHG, May, v. 38, #5, p. 599; 1982 "An Analysis of the Genetics of Schizophrenia" w/ K. Kidd q.v., Social Biology, v. 20, 3 (One of the most cited articles from Social Biology, SB 1984, v. 29, 3-4); 1981 "Models of Spouse Influence and Their Application to Smoking Behavior", Social Biology, v. 28, 1-2; "The Genetics of Human Populations", Scientific American, Special Population Issue, Sept. 1974; "Intelligence and Race", Scientific American, Oct. 1970; "Genetic Drift in an Italian Population", Scientific American, Aug. 1969; see also Walter Bodmer q.v.
Background:
-- Genetic Survey 1991
"Genetic survey gains momentum" (proposal to collect DNA sample from aboriginal populations), L. Roberts, Science, v. 254, Oct. 25, p. 517 and similar article by L. Roberts, 1991 Science, v. 252, June 21, p. 1614
-- Language 1991
"Quest for the mother tongue: the story behind the search for the `proto-World'", Atlantic, v. 267, April, p. 39; 1988 "Trees from genes and tongues", R. Lewin, Science, v. 242, Oct. 28, p. 514
Source: Osborne list; AJHG 1989
Cavan, Marshall M.;
Member 1956
Personal:
c/o Cadwallader, Wickersham and Taft, Wall Street, New York City 1956; see Wickersham q.v.
Source: EQ 1956
Cazort, Sidney;
Member 1930
Personal:
Arkansas 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chamberlin, R.V.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Utah 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chandler, Simon B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Illinois 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chapin, S.B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
New York 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chapman, Mrs. Florence;
Member 1930
Personal:
Vermont 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chappelle, Dr. B. F.;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
Univ. of Nevada, Reno 1925; Nevada 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Char, Dr. Florence;
Member 1974
Personal:
Dept. Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Univ. Arkansas, Little Rock 1974
Background:
Jocelyn Elders was a professor of pediatrics at this University and is one again.
Source: Osborne list
Charney, Prof. Michael;
Member 1974, 1992
Personal:
b. 1911; University of Colorado (PhD 1969 (anthropology), assoc. prof. to prof., anthropology 1971-76, Emeritus 1977-); Director, Center of Human Identification 1980-; forensic identification; physical anthropology; note very short time period when he was a professor
Publications:
1971 "Intestinal Lactase Deficiency in Adult Nonhuman Primates: Implications for Selection Pressures in Man", Social Biology, v. 18, 4
Source: Osborne list; AMWS 1992
Chase, Miss Ethel W. B.;
Member 1925
Personal:
College of City of Detroit, Michigan 1925
Source: 1925 list
Chase, H.D.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Oklahoma 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chase, Irving;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chatterjee, M.N.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Ohio 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chaudhury, Rafiquel
Hudna;
Member (Foreign) 1974
Personal:
Demographer, Bangladesh Institute of Development Economics, Dacca 1974
Publications:
1984 "The Influence of Female Education, Labor Force Participation, and Age at Marriage on Fertility Behavior in Bangladesh", Social Biology, v. 31, 1-2; 1972 "Socioeconomic and Seasonal Variation in Births: a replication", 1972 report, Social Biology, v. 19, 1; 1971 "Differential Fertility by Religious Groups in East Pakistan" 1971 report, Eugenics Quarterly, v. 18, 2;
Source: Osborne list
Chauncey, Mrs. Betty B.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Oklahoma 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cheney, B.A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cheney, Charles;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cheney, Donald A.;
Member 1930
Personal:
Florida 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Cheney, Louis;
Member 1930
Personal:
Connecticut 1930
Source: Sanger list 1930
Chester, Prof. Webster;
Member 1925, 1930
Personal:
47 Winter St., Waterville, Maine 1925; Maine 1930
Source: 1925 list; Sanger list 1930
Chickeri