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Medicine In 1946: He was a graduate of Moscow University (1931) and in 1943 became a profes¬sor at the Ivanov State Pedagogical Institute. He received a Stalin Prize in 1946 and a Lenin Prize in 1964.
*Muller, Hermann Joseph (Dec. 21, 1890-April 5, 1967). A U.S. geneticist and distin¬guished professor emeritus of zoology at I'-diana University, Muller won the Nobel Pr.-for Physiology or Medicine in 1946 for exp ments performed in 1927, when he artificia.. produced mutations in fruitflies by subjectin: them to X rays, thereby demonstrating the N: reditary effects of radiation. As a result ofk findings, Mu/fer became an outspoken oppone-against further development of nuclear weap-_ ons because of the possible harmful effects I their radiation to man.
Haiphong was a small fishing village 1 the 1880's, when the French began to de-) it as the chief port of the Red River delta, ivemher 1946, on the occasion of a minor ; incident, the city was bombarded by the h, with a loss of at least 6,000 lives. This ed the Indochinese War (1946-1954) be-i France and the newly formed Democratic blic of Vietnam.See Also School Of Medicine Now:Distinguished professor president of the State Stony Brook, Dr. Glass Review of Biology. He the board of trustees of oratory of Quantitative the board of directors for the Advancement of
Dr. Glaser is vice-president for medical affairs, dean, and professor of medicine at Stanford University School of medicine now of Medicine. He is also president-elect of the Association of American Medical Colleges and a mem¬ber of the National Advisory Council of the U.S. Public Health Service, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Board of Medicine of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences.
ROLPH, rolf, John, Canadian politician and physician: b. Thornbury, England, March 4, 1793; d. Mitchell, Ontario, Canada, Oct. 19, 1870. He studied law and medicine, emigrated to Canada in 1812, and in 1821 was called to the bar. He en¬gaged in law practice and later also practiced medi¬cine. He served in the Assembly of Upper Canada from 1824 to 1837. With William Lyon Mackenzie (1795-1861) he planned the insurrection of 1837 and upon its failure sought safety in the United States. After the amnesty of 1843 he returned to Canada and sat in the Canadian Parliament from 1845 until his retirement from politics in 1857. He afterward devoted himself to the practice of medicine and founded the Peoples' School of medicine now of Medicine, which later became a faculty of the University of Toronto.
On The Other Hand See Admitted To Medicine:A great service was rendered by the extension work which the university undertook. Courses in arts were established by correspondence, mainly for the benefit of teachers. With the as¬sistance of these courses, and by attendance at summer school, it became possible for many teachers to obtain their degrees in arts. At least half the work had to be taken in attendance. Courses were set up in banking, in chartered ac¬countancy, and, later, in cost accounting and in trust company procedures.
The university is coeducational. As far back as 1870 classes were opened to women, and in 1880 women were admitted to medicine. There is no course from which women are excluded, though the numbers that take applied science re¬main small. Approximately 1,700 of the more than 5,000 students attending the university in 1967 were women.
RICHET, re-she', Charles Robert, French physiologist: b. Paris, France, Aug. 26, 1850; d. there, Dec. 4, 1935. He graduated in medicine from the University of Paris (1877) and was professor of physiology there (1887-1927). In 1899 he was elected to the Academy of Medicine. Richet experimented with serums to produce im¬munity and also with antigen injections. |
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