Henry marshall basketball
- •
Henry Marshall
Positions
- Affiliate of Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame
- Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame
- Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
- ATH - Associate Professor
- Prince Charles Hospital Northside Clinical Unit
- Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences
Overview
Background
Dr Henry Marshall is a Thoracic Physician at The Prince Charles Hospital and University of Queensland Thoracic Research Centre. Dr Marshall's research interests are in lung cancer screening/early detection and smoking cessation. His PhD (UQ 2015) was based on the first trial of lung cancer screening in Australia. He is site PI for Australia's second screening trial, the International Lung Screen Trial.
Availability
- Associate Professor Henry Marshall is:
- Available for supervision
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland
Research interests
Artificial intelligence for medical imaging
Artificial intelligence for smoking cessation
Biomarkers fo
- •
Henry Marshall (American football)
American football player (born 1954)
American football player
Henry Howard Marshall (born August 9, 1954), is an American former professional football player who was a wide receiver for the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Missouri Tigers and was selected by the Chiefs in the third round of the 1976 NFL draft. A 6'2", 212-lb. receiver, Marshall played his entire NFL career with the Chiefs from 1976 to 1987.[1]
Career
A model of consistency throughout his career, Henry Marshall came to the Chiefs as a third-round draft pick from the University of Missouri in 1976 and stayed for 12 productive seasons. Overcoming the label of a "bad hands" receiver early on, he became Kansas City's top receiver for most of his career.
Paul Wiggin, Marshall's first coach with the Chiefs, described the wide receiver as "a super kid who can be a premier player." Marshall became just that, and by the time he called it quits, he had caught 416 passes for 6,545 yards.
Marshall's cli
- •
Spartacus Educational
Primary Sources
(1) J. Evetts Haley, A Texan Looks at Lyndon (1964)
He (Henry Marshall) had been an employee of the s State Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation office, assigned to investigate the vast jungle of Billie Sol's suspect cotton allotments. His connection with the case was not openly known, and his report was buried in Washington.
On June 3, 1961, Henry Marshall was found dead " on a remote section of his farm near Franklin, Texas. Five days later justice of the Peace Lee Farmer pronounced a verdict of suicide without ordering an autopsy, despite the protestations of Marshall's widow, according to the newspapers, that "he was not the type to commit suicide."
Marshall was buried and his work as an investigator was unknown to most, and all but forgotten by a few, while
the wheeler-dealer from the Pecos flew on, his twin-motored plane virtually at the beck and call of important public figures, from Senator Yarborough and Lyndon's staff in Washington down to John White, Commissioner of Agriculture, in Austin. Aft
Copyright ©dadtori.pages.dev 2025