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Medicine In:

Medicine In 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 in at Stanford University School of medicine in. 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 in of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences.

RICHET, re-she', Charles Robert, French physiologist: b. Paris, France, Aug. 26, 1850; d. there, Dec. 4, 1935. He graduated in medicine in from the University of Paris (1877) and was professor of physiology there (1887-1927). In 1899 he was elected to the Academy of medicine in. Richet experimented with serums to produce im¬munity and also with antigen injections.

See Also Field Of Medicine Has Already:

The discovery of penicillin was perhaps one of the most revolutionary events in the history of medicine—from two points of view. First, it was a drug relatively nontoxic to man (except, of course, in those cases where a person is allergic to the drug) but a highly potent bactericide. Second, this seren¬dipitous event resulted in the establishment of a new field of chemotherapeutic investigation—antibiotics research—and the floodgate was opened. Today's medicine cabinet contains lit¬erally hundreds of antibiotics of various sources, potencies, and ranges of bactericidal activity.

The replacement of defective human organs has become a commonplace oc¬currence in operating rooms in many parts of the world. Whether considering the implantation of artificial devices or the transplantation of hearts, lungs, or kidneys, surgeons and prospective recipients have gained new hope for pro¬longing life. This new field of medicine has already overcome many technical difficulties, but it still faces other problems, especially those associated with graft rejection and the legal definition of death.


On The Other Hand See Professor Of Medicine:

Golgi was born in Corteno, Italy, on [y 7, 1844. He studied medicine at the Univer-f of Padua and then did histological research the University of Pavia. In 1879 he was ap-inted Professor of medicine of anatomy at the University Siena, but he returned to Pavia as Professor of medicine of tology and general pathology the following ir. He died in Pavia on Jan. 21, 1926.

QUAIN, Richard, British surgeon, brother of Jones Quain (q.v.) : b. Fermoy, County Cork, Ireland, July 1800; d. London, England, Sept. 15, 1887. After studying medicine in London and in Paris, he taught in University College, London, from 1828 to 1866, acting as Professor of medicine of descrip¬tive anatomy (1832-1850) and as Professor of medicine of clinical surgery in the hospital (1848-1866). One of the first fellows of the Royal College of Sur¬geons in 1843, Quain was its president in 1868.

 

 

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