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Practiced Medicine In Oxford:

Practiced Medicine In Oxford RADCLIFFE, John, English physician: b. Wakefield, England, 1650 ; d. Carshalton, Nov. 1, 1714. He was graduated from University Col¬lege, Oxford, in 1669, and from then until 1677 was a fellow of Lincoln College. Meanwhile, in 1675, he obtained a medical degree and practiced medicine in Oxford until 1684. Moving to Lon¬don, he soon became one of the leading physicians of the period, numbering William III, Queen Mary, and other members of the royal family among his patients, and amassed a large fortune. He was elected to Parliament in 1690 and 1713, and for many years served as governor of St.

REED, Charles Alfred Lee, American sur¬geon: b. Wolf Lake, Ind., July 9. 1856; d. Glen-cester, Mass., Aug. 28, 1928. Educated at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, and at the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, he was profes¬sor of gynecology and abdominal surgery a! the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery 1882-1895; became gynecologist at the Cincinnati

See Also Of Medicine ":

The Albert Lasker Medical Journalism Awards, each consisting of medicine " $2,000, a citation, and a statuette, were presented to Columbia Broadcasting News for "Man-Made Man," a documentary of medicine " current research on organ trans¬plants; Carl M. Cobb of medicine " The Boston Globe for his five-part series "Mississippi Medicine"; and Matt Clark, medicine editor for Newsweek, for the story, "The Heart Miracle in Capetown."

Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. Sweden's Royal Caroline Institute selected three men to honor with the 1967 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. The award was be¬stowed "for their discoveries concerning the primary chemical and physiological visual proc¬esses in the eye." (1) Ragnar Granit, a Swedish neurophysiologist, taught at the Universities of medicine " Pennsylvania and Helsinki, Fin., before he joined the Royal Caroline Institute in 1940; he became the director in 1945. Since the 1920s his work has been in color perception, determining the process of medicine " impulses in the complex cell network of medicine " the retina. (2)


On The Other Hand See Clinical Medicine:

The present-day approach to the Cancer problem finds many disciplines of medicine actively coop¬erating toward its eradication, with much of this work being done in larger clinical centers. Sur¬gery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy are comple¬mentary in this assault. An integrated knowledge of the basic sciences provides the background for the progress being made.

ROBERTS, John Bingham, American sur¬geon and author: b. Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 29, 1852; d. there, Nov. 28, 1924. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania in 1871, he received his medical degree at the Jefferson Medical Col¬lege in 1874. Attending physician and lecturer on clinical medicine at the Jefferson Medical College Hospital, and lecturer on anatomy and surgery at the Philadelphia School of Anatomy and the Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, he held several other professional appointments.

 

 

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