found: U.S. Cong. Senate. Comm. on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Nomination of Donald A. Henderson, 1991:t.p. (Donald A. Henderson to be an associate director, Office of Science and Technology Policy) p. 4 (Henderson, Donald Ainslie, b. Sept. 7, 1928)
found: Smallpox, 2009:ECIP t.p. (D.A. Henderson, MD) dataview (D. A. Henderson, professor of medicine and public health at the University of Pittsburgh and a distinguish scholar at the Center for Biosecurity in Baltimore ; b. Sept. 7, 1928)
found: Henderson, Donald A., M.D. Bioterrorism, 2002:ECIP t.p. (Donald A. Henderson, MD, MPH)
found: Biog. resource center (Encyc. world biog. suppl.), Dec. 1, 2009(Donald Ainslie Henderson; b. Sept. 7, 1928, Lakewood, Ohio; public health educator, epidemiologist, physician; M.D., University of Rochester, 1954; ran the World Health Organization's smallpox eradication program, 1966-1977; served as dean, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 1977-1990; science adviser to the White House, 1991-1993; associate director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy; deputy assistant secretary of HHS for health and science, 1993-1995; returned to the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health as a professor, 1995; because of fears over bioterrorism, founded and became director of the Johns Hopkins University Center for Civilian Biodefense Studies, 1997; transferred to the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's new Center for Biosecurity, Nov. 1, 2003)
found: New York times WWW site, viewed Aug. 23, 2016(in obituary published Aug. 21: Dr. Donald A. Henderson; b. Donald Ainslee [sic] Henderson, Sept. 7, 1928, Lakewood, Ohio; d. Friday [Aug. 19, 2016], Towson, Md., aged 87; lived in Baltimore; leader of one of mankind's greatest public health triumphs, the eradication of smallpox; graduate of Oberlin College)
found: Oberlin College yearbook (Hi-o-hi), 1947, via Ancestry.com, viewed Aug. 23, 2016:p. 226 (Henderson, Donald Ainslie)