|
The previous year,
1901, the Hygienic Laboratory had been recognized for the first time in a
statute. The "experiment" with science in the federal government proved so
successful that Congress authorized $35,000 for a separate building for the
laboratory in a supplemental appropriations act that year. It noted that the
Laboratory had the authority to investigate "infectious and contagious
diseases and matters pertaining to the public health." Thus was the organic
legislation for the National Institutes of Health written into law. |