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/*President Lincoln was attending a play at Ford&rsquo;s Theatre in Washington, D.C. on the evening of April 14, 1865. John Wilkes Booth entered the presidential box and fired a single bullet from a derringer into the back of Lincoln&rsquo;s head. As Booth escaped from the theater, Dr. Charles Leale made his way through the audience to Lincoln&rsquo;s box. Leale quickly assessed the wound as fatal. The president was moved to a boarding house located across the street from Ford&rsquo;s Theatre. Several physicians attended Lincoln, including U.S. Army Surgeon General Joseph K. Barnes of the Army Medical Museum. Using a probe, Barnes located some fragments of Lincoln&rsquo;s skull and the ball lodged 6 inches inside his brain. Lincoln, who never regained consciousness, was comforted until his breathing stopped at 7:20 a.m. on April 15.*/

Text[0]=["caption","<font color=#000090 face=arial>The museum is currently located on the campus of Walter Reed Army Medical Center at 6900 Georgia Ave., NW, in Washington, D.C.</font>"]
Text[1]=["Permanent Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>On the evening of July 2, 1863, while riding horseback during the second day of fighting at Gettysburg, 3rd Army Corps commander Major General Daniel E. Sickles had his right leg shattered by a solid 12-pound cannonball. He quieted his horse, dismounted, and was removed to a sheltered area where his leg was amputated just above the knee. A short time later, the Army Medical Museum received the amputated leg in a box bearing a visiting card which read: &quot;With the compliments of Major General D.E.S.&quot; For many years on the anniversary of the amputation, Sickles would visit the museum to view his leg.</font>"]
Text[2]=["Permanent Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>Scholars think Robert Hooke (1635-1703) used this microscope on display at the National Museum of Health and Medicine when he prepared &quot;Micrographia,&quot; the first book describing observations made through a microscope. He was the first person to use the word &quot;cell&quot; to identify microscopic structures, describing cork: &quot;...these pores, or cells, were not very deep, but consisted of a great many little boxes.&quot; Hooke discovered a law of elasticity for solid bodies, now known as Hooke&rsquo;s Law. He was appointed curator of experiments for the British Royal Society in 1662.</font>"]
Text[3]=["Permanent Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>The National Library of Medicine started the Visible Human Project in the early 1990s to build a database containing digital images of two cadavers - one male and one female. The male was a 39-year-old convicted murderer who was executed by lethal injection in Texas in 1993. Researchers scanned the body, embedded it with gelatin, froze it, then cut it crosswise into transverse slices 1 millimeter thick, about the thickness of a nickel. After each slice, the exposed body surface was photographed. The result, completed in 1997, is a series of images revealing the flesh-and-blood geography of the human body, available for education and research. This can be examined at a computer station in the museum&lsquo;s &quot;Human Body, Human Being&quot; exhibit.</font>"]
Text[4]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>During the Korean Conflict the military developed, tested, and deployed several new pieces of body armor to protect troops in combat. These protective vests, weighing 6 to 8 pounds each, decreased chest wounds by 60 percent and reduced the severity of the wounds that did occur. A model of the heart (foreground) shows how shrapnel can penetrate deep inside an unprotected soldier&rsquo;s chest cavity and injure this vital organ.</font>"]
Text[5]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>Skeletal structures begin forming in the embryo when specialized cells form the spinal column, skull, arms and legs.  During fetal development, the bones grow in both length and width.  Much of this growth takes place in the joint areas, where specialized layers of cartilage create bone.  Bone growth ceases in the late teen years when adult height is reached and the growth plates disappear.</font>"]
Text[6]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>The new M2A Capsule, a &quot;pill endoscope&quot; created by Given Imaging, Ltd., allows physicians to see parts of the small intestines that older conventional methods do not.</font>"]
Text[7]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>The National Museum of Health and Medicine has welcomed visitors since the 1860s, including many young, native Washingtonians. A trip to the museum and its unique anatomical and historical collections often stands out in these visitors&rsquo; memories of childhood.</font>"]
Text[8]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>This J.H. Emerson model SC iron lung machine was used at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 1954. (M-710-00035)</font>"]
Text[9]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>Medicine and Morality: A History of Syphilis and Gonorrhea recounts social and medical responses to sexually transmitted diseases using photographs, posters, and instruments.</font>"]
Text[10]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>The head and shoulders of a girl who died naturally in the late 1800s and was embalmed using an arsenic-laced formula illustrates the preservative powers of arsenic and calls attention to the possibility of it contaminating drinking water. It is displayed in the exhibit running indefinitely, &quot;Research Matters: Environmental and Toxicological Effects of Arsenic,&quot; at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C. which highlights the developing science of medical geology used by the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) to study health problems associated with arsenic.</font>"]
Text[11]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>David Boyer, director, DNA Repository, AFIP, collects DNA samples at the temporary morgue in Somerset County, Pa. Photo by James Ross, bioformatics manager, AFDIL, AFIP.</font>"]
Text[12]=["Past Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>This is an enhanced magnetic resonance image of an embryo at 44 days old, one of more than 80 images that chronicle human development in &quot;Conception to Birth&quot; on display from Oct. 29, 2002 - Aug. 29, 2003 at The National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, DC. The exhibit is based on the book by Alexander Tsiaras that traces the growth and development of life through the use of a new medical imaging technology. This next generation of imaging allowed Tsiaras to capture the developing baby from never before seen angles.</font>"]
Text[13]=["Past Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>&quot;I Wish I Could Have Done More&quot; is a graphite rendering of &quot;a frustrated and fatigued orthopaedic surgeon &quot;who has done all in his power to repair the injured patient (and) knows all too well it may not have been enough,&quot; according to artist William R. Loscher, M.D.</font>"]
Text[14]=["Permanent Exhibit","<font color=#000090 face=arial>A military surgeon performs an operation during the Korean War, in this photograph taken in the 1950s.</font>"]
Text[15]=["","This is only text"]
Text[16]=["","Some Lists <li>list one</li> <li>list two</li> <li>list three</li> <li>list four</li>"]
Text[17]=["","Figure imaging inner space 2004."]
Text[18]=["Running Indefinitely","A fetus still in the womb"]
Text[19]=["Running Indefinitely","The museum is currently located on the campus of Walter Reed Army Medical Center at 6900 Georgia Ave., NW, in Washington, D.C."]
Text[20]=["","An image of the skeletal system, showing range of motion, is among more than 60 images on display in &quot;The Human Body Revealed&quot; at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C."]
Text[21]=["caption","President Abraham Lincoln was attending a play at Ford's Theatre in Washington on the evening of April 14, 1865 when John Wilkes Booth entered the presidential box and fired a single bullet from a derringer into the back of Lincoln's head. Several physicians attended Lincoln, including U.S. Army Surgeon General Joseph K. Barnes of the Army Medical Museum. Using a probe, Barnes located some fragments of Lincoln's skull and the ball lodged 6 inches inside his brain. Lincoln, who never regained consciousness, was comforted until his breathing stopped at 7:20 a.m. on April 15."]
Text[22]=["caption","The National Museum of Health and Medicine holds several photos and unique anatomical specimens that open a window onto Walt Whitman's life and his experiences in Washington's Civil War hospitals."]
Text[23]=["caption","Sharps! is a wooden egg covered in 46,000 pins, on display in the exhibit, “Body Image/Body Essence: viewing ovarian cancer through the art of sculpture"]
Text[24]=["caption","Spraying the throat as preventive treatment against influenza at Love Field in Texas is one of many 1918 influenza pandemic images in the collections of the Otis Historical Archives at The National Museum of Health and Medicine."]
Text[25]=["caption","A visualization of the heart within the chest cavity is on display in A Healthy Heart."]
Text[26]=["Running Indefinitely","<font color=#000090 face=arial>Vincent A. Przybyla Jr., spent 38 years in his lab at Walter Reed Army Medical Center making prosthetic eyes for soldiers.</font>"]
Text[27]=["caption","<font color=#000090 face=arial>One of 55 original cartoons, this one appeared June 24, 1997 in the Tampa Tribune by Wayne Stayskal.</font>"]
Text[28]=["caption","Human hairball on permanent display in the museum. M906252"]
Text[29]=["caption","Lost finger due to band-saw accident. Mono-print, gouache, color pencil. One of 35 in the Scarred for Life exhibit."]

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