eric traub, hannibal hamlin and jose delgado did horrific experiments on plum island near the headquarters of the german american bund robert mahue was a member of
http://unabloggerunplugged.blogspot.com/2021/08/plum-island.html?m=1
'Early career and war
During the 1930s, he [eric traub] studied on a fellowship at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in Princeton, New Jersey mentored by Richard Shope, performing research on vaccines and viruses, including pseudorabies virus and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCM).[3][4][5] During his stay in the United States, Traub and his wife were listed as members of the German American Bund, a pro-Nazi German-American club thirty miles west of Plum Island in Yaphank, Long Island, from 1934 to 1935.[6]'
'Abstract:Dr. Jose M. R. Delgado, Associate Professor of Physiology and Psychology at the Yale School of Medicine, gave his report on how implanting very thin electrodes in the human brain can serve as a valuable aid in the diagnosis of epilepsy at the Eastern Association of Electroencephalographers meeting at the New York University-Bellevue Medical Center, New York, N. Y, With his associate, Dr. Hannibal Hamlin, of Providence, R.I., Dr. Delgado has made electrode diagnoses of eight patients with severe psychomotor epilepsy.View less'
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/64426
dr hannibal hamlin obit my times
https://www.nytimes.com/1982/06/29/obituaries/dr-hannibal-hamlin-former-neurosurgeon.html
'The first fully-qualified neurosurgeon in Rhode Island was Dr. Hannibal Hamlin. Hamlin had spent time during his training in Dr. John Fulton’s neurophysiology laboratory at Yale, which was a common part of many neurosurgeons’ experience in those days. When he joined the staff of Rhode Island Hospital in 1947, following Navy service in World War II, Dr. Hamlin obtained a grant to fund clinical research on electrodes in temporal lobe epilepsy.'
https://brownneurosurgery.com/the-history-of-brown-neurosurgery/
'He first used a stimoceiver on humans in 1952, treating 25 carefully chosen patients with chronic refractory epilepsy and schizophrenia at a now-defunct Rhode Island asylum. This human research was infrequently conducted because, according to Scientific American, “the therapeutic benefits of implants were unreliable; results varied widely from patient to patient and could be unpredictable even in the same subject.”
Delgado’s work began suffering unfairly from comparisons to the work of António Moniz, the Nobel Prize-winning developer of the once-heralded, but now-disgraced lobotomy procedure. (Ironically, the procedure had been inspired by Fulton, Delgado’s mentor at Yale.) Although Delgado opposed lobotomies, the backlash against the procedure would extend to the significantly less invasive brain surgery he employed.'
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