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    • American microbiologist and academic

      • Albert Israel Schatz (2 February 1920 – 17 January 2005) was an American microbiologist and academic who discovered streptomycin, the first antibiotic known to be effective for the treatment of tuberculosis.
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  2. Albert Israel Schatz (2 February 1920 – 17 January 2005) was an American microbiologist and academic who discovered streptomycin, the first antibiotic known to be effective for the treatment of tuberculosis.

  3. Feb 2, 2005 · Albert Schatz, a microbiologist who in the 1940's helped develop the powerful antibiotic streptomycin but later had to go to court to be recognized as a co-discoverer of the drug, died on Jan....

  4. Albert Schatz was a 23 year-old graduate student working on his Ph.D. at Rutgers University when he discovered streptomycin, the first antibiotic effective against tuberculosis.

  5. Jun 11, 2012 · The story of streptomycin is no ordinary tale of discovery. It began in August 1943, when Dr. Schatz, a 23-year-old graduate student at the Rutgers College of Agriculture, isolated the powerful...

  6. Albert Israel Schatz (2 February 1920 – 17 January 2005) was an American microbiologist and academic who discovered streptomycin, the first antibiotic known to be effective for the treatment of tuberculosis.

  7. Oct 19, 2010 · But it was Albert Schatz, a 23-year-old graduate student under Waksman, who actually isolated the antibiotic after several months of feverish work.

  8. Peter Pringle, in Experiment Eleven, chronicles the discovery of streptomycin by Albert Schatz while working in Waksman’s laboratory at Rutgers University in New Jersey. Waksman was primarily a soil microbiologist and a world authority on Actinomycetes species.

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