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PREVENTING THE REJECTION OF TRANSPLANTED ORGANS REFERENCES BILLINGHAM, R. E., and SILVERS, W. K. (editors)(1961) Transplantation ofTisguesand Cells,p. 90. Philadelphia, WistarInstitute Press. BRENT, L., and MEDAWAR, P. B. (1958) Transplant Bull. 5, 377. IncludedinPlast. reconstr. Surg.22, 377. and MEDAWAR, P. B. (1953) Ann. Surg. 137, 444. and SILVERS, W. K. (1960)J. Immunol. 85, 14. DRESSER, D. W. (1962)Immunology5,378. FLEXNER, S., andJOBLING,J. W. (1907)Proc. Soc. exp. Biol. N.Y.4, 156. GLENNY,A.T.,andHOPKINS, B. E.(1924)J.Hyg.(Lond.)23,208. HARDIN, C.A.,andWERDER,A. A.(1955) Ann.N.Y. Acad. Sci. 59,381. HERZENBERG, L.A.,andHERZENBERG, L.(1961)Proc.nat. Acad. Sci.47,762. HOLMAN, H., FEFER, A.,andDAVIS,W. C. (1963)J. clin.Invest. 42,943 (abstract). HOWARD, R. J., GORDON, J. M., POLLARD, B., MARTINEZ, C., and GOOD, R. A. (1964) Proc. Soc. exp. Biol. N.Y. 115,980. LINDER, 0. (1961) Transplant Bull. 28, 36. Included inPlast. reconstr. Surg. 28, 134. LINN,B. S. (1966)Ann.Surg. 164,223. MCKNEALLY,M.F.,KELLY,W.D.,RESNICK,J.,andMARTINEZ,C.(1964)Suirg.Forum. 15, 131. MAYER, D. J., KRONMAN, B., DUMONT, A. E. (1965) Surg. Forum, 16, 243. MARTINEZ,C.,SMITH,J. M.,BLAESE,M.,andGOOD,R.A.(1963)J.exp. Med. 118,743. MEDAWAR,P.B. (1963) Transplantation, 1,21. MITCHISON,N.A.(1964)Proc. Roy. Soc.Lond. S.B. 161,275. MONACO,A.P., WOOD, M.L.,andRUSSELL,P. S.(1964)Surg.Forum, 15, 133. OWEN, E. R. (1968) Nature, 219, 970. (1969) In Recent Advances inPaediatric Surgery, edit. A. W. Wilkinson, 2nd edit., Chap. 20. London, Churchill. SLOME, D., andWATERSTON, D. J. (1968) InAdvance in Transplantation, p. 385. Copenhagen, Munksgaard. REEMTSMA,K.(1966)InAdvancesinSurgery,2.Chicago,YearBookMedicalPublishers. RODGERS, B. M., SULLIVAN, J., and HALLER, J. A., JNR. (1966) Surg. Forum, 17, 280. SEIFERT, L. N., HALASZ, N. A., ORLOFF, M. J., and ROSENFIELD, H. A. (1966) Surg. Forum, 17, 278. STUART, F. P., SAITOH, T., FITCH, F. W., and SPARGO, B. H. (1968) Surgery, 64, 17. TAGUCHI, Y., MACKINNON, K. J., and DOSSETOR, J. B. (1968) In Advance in Transplantation,p.393.Copenhagen, Munksgaard. TAMINI,T., VOSIKA, G. J., andAUST, J. B. (1966)Proc. Soc. exp. Biol. N.Y. 121, 1133. ULLMANN, E. (1902) Wienklin. Wschr. 15,281. WILSON, R. E. D., RIPPEN, A., HAYES, C. R., DAGHER, R. K., andBUSCH, G. J. (1968) Personal communication. WILSON, R. E. (1966) In Advances inSurgery, 2,p. 109. Chicago, YearBook Medical Publishers. ZIMMERMAN, C. E., BUSCH, G. J., STUART, E. P., and WILSON, R. E. (1968) Surgery, 63,437. STUART, F. P.,andWILSON, R. E. (1965)Surg. Forum, 16,267. FACULTY OF DENTAL SURGERY THE BALLOT FOR the election of three Fellows in Dental Surgery to the Board took place on Friday, 20th June, in the presence of the Dean, Mr. B. W. Fickling, and Mr. John Cambrook, F.D.S.R.C.S., and Mr. J. M. Leitch, F.D.S.R.C.S., who acted as Scrutineers. As a result of this election Professor Ralph Coker, C.B.E., and Pro- fessor Geoffrey L. Slack, O.B.E., T.D., were re-elected and Professor Geoffrey L. Howe, T.D., was elected to the Board. 79 ANATOMICAL INJECTIONS for example when the arteries of a stillborn baby are injected. The best results are obtained if the resin is injected as late as possible. The rise in temperature during pot life is used to time the injection. Usually the injection is made when the temperature has risen from the starting temperature of 200 C. to between 26° and 280 C. After the resin has gelled the temperature of a considerable bulk of resin, not specially cooled, may rise to more than 150° C. This only presents a problem in anatomical injections when a relatively large cavity is filled, such as the cavities of the heart. In this case, cracking due to overheating of the resin after it has gelled is controlled if not completely eliminated by immersing the heart in water cooled to 100 C. during the injection ofresin, instead ofallowing the organ to rest in water at about 300 C., as is normal practice. Polyester resin is ideal for corrosion casting and sometimes it is particularly suitable for filling vessels of material to be dissected. Thickened to a paste by adding powdered vinyl resin VYHH, made by the Bakelite Company, it can be injected into the synovial sheaths of hand and foot. Before this is done the sheaths must be fully exposed by careful dissection. The use ofa mass with the consistency ofa paste allows much greater control of the injection and checks the tendency of the mass to escape outside the cavities which the tendon sheaths enclose. The injection is made with a hypodermic syringe and needle. Numerous small amounts of resin are injected and needle pricks are made through tendon sheaths to allow fluid displaced by resin to escape. Resin which escapes from sheaths is trimmed away after it has set. REFERENCES BELL, C. (1810) System ofDissections, explaining the Anatomy ofthe Human Body, 2nd edit. London. GEROTA, D. (1896) Anat. Anz. 12, 216. TOMPSETT, D. H. (1968) Ann. Roy. Coll. Surg. Engl. 43, 111. DONATIONS DURING THE PAST few weeks the following generous donations have been received: £21,200 Cocoa, Chocolate and Confectionery Alliance (further gift towards Dental Research Unit). £7,000 Turner and Newall Limited (7-yr. covenant, £1,000 p.a. less tax) (further gift). £4,813 36. CakeandBiscuit Alliance Limited (furthergift to Dental Research Unit). £1,251 ls. 6d. Legal and General Assurance Society Limited (7-yr. covenant, £105 p.a. plus tax) (further gift). £1,000 Legacy from the late Miss N. G. Gardner. £875 Whitbread and Company Limited (promise of 5 annual payments, £175 p.a.) (further gift). £500 Lamson Industries Limited (further gift). £100 Massey-Ferguson Holdings Limited (further gift). Inadditiontherehavebeenanumberofgiftsunder£100whichtotal-£296 lOs. 1ld. 115 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY AT AN EXTRAORDINARY MEETING of the Council on 9th July 1969, with Professor Sir Hedley Atkins, K.B.E., President, in the Chair, Diplomas of Fellowship were granted to the candidates named on page 122. Diplomas of Fellowship in Dental Surgery were granted to the candi- dates named on page 125. 260Diplomates werepresented, inorderofMedical Schools, asfollows: Fellows; Fellows in Dental Surgery; Fellows in the Faculty of Anaes- thetists; Members; Licentiates in Dental Surgery. Sir Derrick Dunlop, M.D., F.R.C.P., Chairman of the Medicines Commission, delivered the following address to the new diplomates: 'I am deeply grateful to you, Mr. President, and to your Council for the great honour you have done me-a member of another medical discipline from over the Border-by inviting me to be here this morning. Perhaps it is an expression of the intimate relationship which now exists between the various Royal Colleges in the United Kingdom-a sort ofmedical ecumenicalism inwhich, without loss ofidentity, the Colleges have progressed towards intercommunion. The surgery which this great Guildrepresents isnotjust acraft, notjust an art, notjust a science, but some- thing of all three, holding in its mansion much to stimulate the best in many types to live a life worthy ofa man-of a man who only bows his head to skill ofhand, genius ofmind and benevolence ofheart. Sir, it is indeed a privilege for me to be the guest of such men. 'As I look at yournewdiplomates to-day I amreminded ofthehymn I learned as a child containing the couplet: "Lo! these aretheyfromsufferings great Whocametorealms oflight," and I feel sure that as they in their turn look at some ofthose on this platform who have come to wish them well they will be surprised at how benign their erstwhile examiners have suddenly become. 'Still, I fear that the new diplomates may find it excessively irksome that I should stand across their eager path delaying even for a few minutes the enjoyment oftheir new emancipation. In Edinburgh University, where I used to be a Professor, theVice-Chancellor's hatwithwhichhecaps thenewgraduates isreported-probably quite apocryphally-tohavebeenmadeout ofJohnKnox'strousers, andIsometimes thought that the touch on the head ofthat formidable divine's nether garments gave thenewgraduates gracetobearwithpatiencesomeofthesententious addressesIhave heard inflicted on them on those occasions. I hope, Sir, that your handshake this morninghashad asimilarvirtue, though Iwillcertainly beshortand, evenifthelove of sermonizing runs strongly in the blood ofmost Scotsmen, especially in those like myself born at the end of Queen Victoria's glorious reign, I promise to resist that temptation as much aspossible. 'Myfirstduty,then,onbehalfofeveryonehereistocongratulatethenewdiplomates on their achievement and to wish them long, active, happy and successful years of service, which I do with all myheart. As you sit in this splendidhallasnewFellows and diplomates of this great College I trust you are not all too sophisticated to feel a thrill ofpride injoining a sodality which for many years has dominated the craft, the art and the science of surgery. Its history, of course, goes back for centuries to thetimeofHenry VIII, but oldmedicalhistory, althoughfascinatinginits interest, has always for me had the fascination of the grotesque and horrible: the squalid Hogarthiansquabbles ofthesuperiorgold-headedcanephysicians withtherough and brutal surgeons (the physicians had nothing to be superior about, for they did little but to befuddle knowledge with philosophy and theology, to speculate but not to experiment, tosyllogize but not to observe); and it is not surprising whenyou think of their associations that the surgeons were rough and brutal-the cuttings for the stone, the amputations, the red hot irons, the sepsis, the cockpits of warships, the horrible resurrectionists. Nevertheless, the Royal Medical Corporations were then 116 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY immensely self-conscious oftheir dignity and privileges, so much so that their proud hallswerelikethecavesofBoeotia,which so awed those who entered that they never smiled again. The Colleges had, of course, their early great patron saints, but the lamp which Harvey lit for the physicians and that which Hunter lit for the surgeons took alongtimeto blazeinto thesplendourandpromise ofthelast 150years. 'Your College has, ofcourse, forlongceased to cultivate acloistered virtue and is involvedinworld-wideissues. AtfirstitdominatedsurgicaleducationintheColonies, and when they became Dominions and finally came ofage in the Commonwealth it provided them with a model on which to build their own Colleges. Its traditions of high scholarship and integrity have thus moulded the practice of surgery not only in this country but throughout the world. Further, the proper sphere for medical teaching outside a University is in the training of the post-graduate, in which your College now plays a predominant r6le; and post-graduate education is one of the few strong remaining links binding together the loose combination of the Common- wealth. 'Youhaveclimbed thehardsummit oftheFellowship andto-daystandlikeCortez on apeak in Darien with awildsurmise as to what the Pacific ofthe future holds in store for you. I confess you will haveto deal with far more complex problems than confronted my generation: quite ordinary chaps in our profession are now being faced with Jehovah-like responsibilities: forexample, theethics oforgantransplanta- tion; the controversial diagnosis ofdeath; theproper extent ofcommunication with the lay public in the press and on television; the answer to abortion on demand; theproperwaytocontrolthepopulationexplosion; andthepreservation oflife when theneedforit seems tohavepassed. I donotprofesstoknowthe answers to these problems, and who am I to dogmatize about them to you-to play thepart ofTobit to your Tobias or to speak like that tedious old Polonius to your young Laertes? Nevertheless, this Ido know, that the successful solutionofthese problems can only be accomplished by good men and good women ofhigh integrity. You must, there- fore, keep your escutcheons bright, not only to ensure yourpersonal credit, but also because the reputation ofyour surgical alma mater will bejudged to some extent by your demeanour and your actions. You are now part of a great surgical tradition carryingwithitresponsibilitiesaswellasprivileges. Iknowitisthefashionnowadays toscoffattradition: todosoismerelytobesilly,preciousandintellectually snobbish; you might as well scoff at the power ofheredity; and as you go out on your great adventure, oftento thefourcorners oftheworld, thisvenerable Collegein givingyou her benison to-day entrusts to each one of you a little bit of her great traditional reputation. I am confident it will be safe in your strong young hands. The best ofluckto you all.' At a Quarterly Meeting of the Council on 10th July 1969, with Professor Sir Hedley Atkins, K.B.E., President, in the Chair, Sir Thomas Holmes Sellors (Fig. 1) was elected President for the ensuing year. Professor Sir Frank Holdsworth and Mr. Robert V. Cooke were elected Vice-Presidents for the ensuing year. The death ofthe Rt. Hon. the Earl of Scarbrough, Honorary Fellow, was reported with deep regret. Mr. Norman Capener, C.B.E., and Mr. E. G. Muir were re-admitted and Mr. David Trevor and Mr. Howard G. Hanley were admitted as members of the Council. 117 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY The following were elected to the Court of Examiners for the ensuing three years: In General Surgery Mr. H. F. Anderson, F.R.C.S., ofSt. George's Hospital Mr. T. J. Fairbank, F.R.C.S., ofCambridge Mr. D. F. Ellison Nash, F.R.C.S., ofSt. Bartholomew's re-elections Hospital Mr. D. H. Randall, F.R.C.S., ofSheffield .j# . ~~~~.~_ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fig. 1. SirThomasHolmes Sellors, elected President ofthe College on 10th July. Mr. L. T. Cotton, F_R_C.S ofKing's College Hospital Mr. A. York Mason, F.R.C.S. of St. Helier Hospital In Ophthalmology Mr. P. L. Blaxter, F_R.C.S ofManchester Mr. C. A. G. Cook MC GM F.CS of Moor fields Hospital re-elections Mr. D. P. Greaves, F.R.C.S. of Moorfields Hospital Mr. M. J. Roper-Hall, F.R.C.S. ofBirmingham 118 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY In Otolaryngology Mr. Douglas Ranger, F.R.C.S., of Middlesex Hospital (re-election) Mr. E. H. Miles Foxen, F.R.C.S., of Westminster Hospital. Professors, Lecturers and Demonstrators for the ensuing year were elected as follows: Hunterian Professorships Anscombe, Anthony Rex .. .. One lecture on surgery in haemophilia and allied disorders. Jackson, John Walter .. .. .. One lecture on the surgical approach to the anterior spinal column. Gardner, Arthur Michael Newsam .. One lecture on surgery in the prevention of fatal pulmonary embolism with some observations on the morbid anatomy of veins. Hadfield, Esme Havelock .. .. One lecture on a study ofadenocarcinoma of the paranasal sinuses in wood workers in thefurniture industry. Karanjavala, Dara Kaikhushroo .. One lecture on lymphangiography in the management of filarial chyluria. Ong, Guan-Bee .. .. .. One lecture on colocystoplasty for bladder carcinoma after radical total cystec- tomy. Wickham, JohnEwart Alfred .. One lecture on a method ofregional renal hypothermia. Nelson, Martin Andrew .. One lecture on the orthopaedic aspects of chondrodystrophies. Balasegaram, Manickavasagar .. One lecture on hepatic surgery-present andfuture. Rowe-Jones, David Colin .. One lecture on the penetration and con- centration of cytotoxins in malignant tumours. Kemp, Hubert Bond Stafford .. One lecture on Perthes's disease: an ex- perimental and clinical study. Dormandy, JohnAdam .. .. One lecture on the clinical significance of blood viscosity. Arris and Gale Lectureships Negus, David .. .. .. .. One lecture on the post-thrombotic syn- drome. Kune, GabrielAndrew .. .. One lecture on the influence of structure and function in the surgery of the biliarytract. Barnes, AnthonyDavid .. .. One lecture on genetic studies of the transplantation antigens. Ross, AlexanderPatrickJoseph .. Onelectureonthefatembolismsyndrome: withspecialreferencetotheimportance of hypoxia in the syndrome. Erasmus Wilson Demonstratorships Calo, Aldous Raphael .. One demonstration. Clifford, Peter .. .. .. .. Onedemonstration. Scott, GeorgeBarton Douglas .. Onedemonstration. Skelton, Martin Oliver .. .. One demonstration. Woolf,Neville .. .. .. Onedemonstration. McColl, Ian .. .. .. .. Onedemonstration. ArnottDemonstratorships Dobson, Jessie .. .. .. .. Onedemonstration. Eastoe, JohnEric .. .. .. Onedemonstration. James,Thomas Geraint Illtyd Onedemonstration. Livingston, Richard McPhail .. Onedemonstration. Marsh, Michael Newton .. One demonstration. 119 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY The appointment of Professor A. J. Harding Rains, F.R.C.S., as Editor ofthe Annals from 1st July, 1969, for 5 years in the first instance, was reported. The Hallett Prize was awarded to Dr. Farhad Afshar, L.R.C.P., M.R.C.S., of The London Hospital Medical College. The award of the Nuffield Prize (Faculty of Anaesthetists) to Dr. EdwardSumner, B.M., B.Ch. (Oxford),oftheUniversityCollege Hospital, was reported. Licences in Dental Surgery were granted to 31 candidates. The following hospitals were recognized under paragraph 23 of the Fellowship Regulations: PosTs RECOGNIZED (all6monthsunlessotherwisestated) HosPrrALS GeneralSurgery Accidentand Otherbranchesof EmergencySurgery Surgery PREsrONRoyalInfirmary Underpara.23(c)(iv) (quinquennial) Regr.(E.N.T.)* BRIDGENDGeneralHospital Underpara.23(b)(iii) (quinquennial) S.H.O.(Ophth.) NEATHGeneralHospital Underpara.23(b)(if) (quinquennial) S.H.O.(Ophth.) HULLRoyalInfirmary UnderCpEara.23(c)(iv) (quinquennialandnew) Regr. .N.T.)* S.H.O.(E.N.T.) LoNDON-RoyalNorthern Regr.* Regr.* Regr.(Orth.)* Hospital R.S.O.(Regr.) 3S.H.O. S.H.O.(Orth.) (quinquennialandnew) (Gen.andUrol.)* 2H.S. ARMY MEDICALSERVICE- S.H.O.*t Military Hospital,Colchester (quinquennial) AYLESBuRY-Stoke Mandeville 2Regr.* Hospital$ S.H.O.* (additional) 3H.S. COLCHESTER-MylandHospital Underpara.23(b)(Ili) (new) S.H.O.(Ophth.)* NORTHSHIELDs-Preston Regr.* Hospital 2S.H.O./H.S. (quinquennialandnew) TyMoUTrH-VictoriaJubilee Regr.* Regr.(Orth.)* Infirmary S.H.O./H.S. S.HLO./H.S.(Orth.) (quinquennialandnew) Regr.(Gen.and Regr.(Cas.and Cas.) Gen.) 3S.H.O.(Gen. and 3S.H.O.(Cas.and Cas.) Gen.) S-roNEHousE-StandishHospital 2S.H.O.(Orth.) (new) WEsTBROMwIcH-Hallam Regr.* Hospital S.H.O. (quinquennialandnew) H.S.(Pre-reg.) WESTBROMWICH-West RS.O.* Regr.* BromwichandDistrict 2 S.H.O. 3S.H.O. GeneralHospital (auliinauennialakndne~w) ^, _ , _ *Postsrecognizedforperiodsof12monthstraining. 1. PUonsttisliJnunGeen1e9r7a2l.SurgeryhavebeentransferredfromTindalHospital. 120 PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JULY Posrs RECOGNIZED (all 6 months unless otherwise stated) HOSPITALS GeneralSurgery - __Acc_id_en_ta_nd_ Otherbranches of EmergencySurgery Surgery PRESTONRoyalInfirmary S_._H_.O=. Underpara.23(b)(iii) (quinquennial) S.H.O.(Ophth.) .i (additional) LuTON-LutonandDunstable 2Regr. 4S.H.O. (Cas.and Regr.(Gen.and Hospital S.H.O. Orth.) Research) (quinquennialandnew) 2H.S. S.H.O.(Gen.and Paed.) ROYALAIRFoRCE-R.A.F. Regr.* 2S.H.O.(Cas.and 2S.H.O.(Orth.and Hospital,Cosford S.H.O.* Orth.) andCas.) (new) HULLRoyalInfirmary S.H.O. (Urol.) (redesignation) (formerlyH.S.) CHELTENHAMGeneralHospital S.H.O. (additional) LONDON-St.James'Hospital, Underpara.23(c)({v) Balham S.H.O.(E.N.T.) (additional) BIRMoNGHAM-Birmingham and Underpara.23(b)(WI) MidlandEyeHospital 2Sen.Regr.*(x) (correctionofJan. 1969 2Sen.Regr.(y) recognition) Sen.Regr.* 3Regr.* Regr.* (z) 4S.H.O.* TIuRo-RoyalCornwall SHO.*t Hospital (revision) BURYST.EDmUNDS-West Underpara.23(b)(iii) SuffolkGeneralHospital S.H.O.(Ophth.) (additional) SUTTONCOLDFIELD-Good Regr.* Regr.(Cas.and Regr.(Orth.and HopeHospital S.H.O.* Orth.) Cas.) (revision) 3S.H.O.(Cas.and 3S.H.O.(Orth.and Orth.) Cas.) LONDON-LewishamHospital S.H.O. S.H.O. (Orth.) (correctionofMarch 1969 recognition) WINcHEsTER-RoyalHampshire S.H.O. CountyHospital (additional) LONDON-HackneyHospital S.H.O. (additional) ISLEWORTH-WestMiddlesex S.H.O.*$ Hospital (revision) HEMELHEMPsTEAD-WestHerts. S.H.O. Hospital (additional) NEwMARKET-GeneralHospital S.H.O. (additional) *Postsrecognizedforperiodsof12monthstraining. tFormerlyrecognizedforperiodsof6monthstraining. $Formerlyrecognizedforperiodsof12monthstraining. (x)JointappointmentswithUnitedBirminghamHospitals. (y)JointappointmentswithSellyOakHospital. (z)JointappointmentwithBromsgroveGeneralandMidlandCentreforNeurosurgery. 121 GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS AT THE RECENT Final Examination for the Fellowship, 17 candidates out of 71 were successful in Ophthalmology, 14 out of 44 in Otolaryn- gology, and 142 out of 522 in General Surgery. At the extraordinary meeting of Council held on 9th July, Diplomas of Fellowship were granted to the following: *MARKWICK, Keith Charles(King's College Hospital). DAVIES, HenryLeighton(Wales). KORLEY, EbenezerKrotelai(St. Thomas's). DORMANDY,JohnAdam(RoyalFree). *LEWKONIA,IrvingKeiva(Liverpool). *KARSERAS, AlecGeorge(St. George's). MILLONS, DavidBrian (St. George's). SAVVIDES, GeorgiosEftychiou(Leeds). UPTON, JulianJohn Mainwaring(Guy's). SKILTON, JohnStewart (St. George's). FOSBERY,DesmondGeorgeWidenham (Westminster). LEWIS,AdamAnthony Murless(St.Bartholomew's). PUSEY, JohnHarrington (St. Bartholomew's). DUPONT, PeterAlan(St. Mary's). YEBOAH, EdwardDonkor(St. Mary's). MONRO, JamesLawrence(TheLondon). ROBERTSON,JamesAnthony(King's College Hospital). SPINDLER, JanJaroslav(King's CollegeHospital). tFENTON, Ronald Storey (Westminster). FIDLER, Malcolm William(University CollegeHospital). GUSTAVSON, Eric Harold (Charing Cross). HODGSON, WalterJohnBarry(Charing Cross). KNOX, AndrewJohn Stuart(St.Bartholomew's). MOORE,KennethThomas Heath (University CollegeHospital). BEARD, RobertJohn(St. George's). EDWARDS,LynnEuryl (University CollegeHospital). FLEW,TimothyJohn(University CollegeHospital). MORLEY,TimothyRowland(University CollegeHospital). PARSONS,ThomasArthur(University College Hospital). THEMEN,ArthurEdward George(St. Mary's). ADISESHIAH, Mohankumar(Westminster). BRADBROOK,RichardAnthony(St. Mary's). COOKE,TheodoreJohnCameron (St. Bartholomew's). SAAD, EdmondAnis (Cairo). HUQ, Zahurul (Dacca). BOYLE,ThomasFinlayson (Edinburgh) *:VALE, Eileen Mary(RoyalFree). tVINCENTI, Norman(Malta). *HAYREH, SohanSingh(Punjab(India)). CHATTERJEE, AnilChandra(Calcutta). ELRAYES, Mohamed Mousa Moustafa(Cairo). NAGISETTY, Lazarus (Madras). *WYATT, HenryTurner(RoyalFree). CHAKRABARTY, BijoyKumar(Calcutta). HUANG, CharlesLouis(RoyalCollegeofPhysiciansandSurgeonsinIreland). tNASSAR, WadiYusef(Beirut). THAKORE, RahulKantilal(Gujarat). BASU, SudhirKumar(Calcutta). tDAVIES, AnnLouise(Sydney). tGUERIN, RobertLangley(Adelaide). KASSAB, RiadhDaniel (Baghdad). MISHRA,Ramanand (Bihar). *InOphthalmology. tInOtolaryngology. IWoman 122 GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS MISHRA, SuryaNarayan(Patna). PAI,BantwalHebbalsinkate Gopinath (Madras). SINHA,RamBali(Patna). CABRE, Martinez CesarArnoldo (Barcelona). DAHABRA, Suleiman Saleem (Cairo). HOOPER, AnthonyAugustus (Westminster). KRISHNARAJAH, Velupillai (Ceylon). TILAK, Shripad Purushottam(Bombay). *ALIBARQ, Zulfiqar(Punjab(Pakistan)). DAJEE, Amritlal(Cape Town). ELGHOROURY, Mahmoud AhmedAhmed (Cairo). JHA, ShailjaNanda(Patna). tLOBO, VictorJohnEudesDominic(St. Mary's). MOMEN, SyedAbdul(Calcutta). SEN GUPTA, Barun(Calcutta). TEWFIK, Ayman Samir(Cairo). DASDE, SubhenduKumar (Calcutta). *ELKINGTON, AndrewRobert(St. Thomas's). GOUGH, Sidney GeorgeWilliam (Manchester). tHOPE, GeoffreyArdern (Manchester). MITRA, SaumenKumar(Calcutta). THULBOURNE, Terence(Sheffield). *TOMKIN, Alexander(Dublin). BARTON, MichaelTreherne(St. Bartholomew's). BORKAR, Surendra Vasant (Bombay). COTTRELL, Gavin McGregor (Melbourne). D'SOUZA, EdwardPaul(Bombay). GALLANNAUGH, Stuart (St. Thomas's). *HIPWELL, Geoffrey Carl (Sydney). JAMES, Alexander Cary (Sydney). *LONG, Jeffrey (Melbourne). McLARTY, William (Adelaide). RENTON-POWER, WilliamErnest Martin (Melbourne). ROY, Raymond Robert (Bristol). TAPIA, Rehmtullah Hasanali(Bombay). *TAYLOR, William (NewZealand). VIVAKANANTHAN, Canthiah(Punjab (India)). BARRETT, GrahamStuart (Charing Cross). BROCK, TerencePhilip(TheLondon). CHECKETTS, RogerGilbert(Sheffield). DUTHIE, JohnScott(Aberdeen) FLIGELMAN, Adam(Melbourne). HAY,RogerWilliam (Otago). IWEZE, Florentius Ikechukwuka(Ibadan). JOHNSON, Laurence Sylvester(Liverpool). KARIM, Mohammad Mahbubul(Dacca). KRIKOR, Mahrous Sirob(Baghdad). MERLIN, MichaelJohn(Leeds). NANDI, Pannalal (Calcutta). PEGUM, John Michael (Dublin). POOLE, BernardThaddeus (Dublin). PROCKTER, GarryJames(Otago). tSHAW, JohnDennis(Sheffield). SHEPHEARD, BrianGeorgeFrank(TheLondon). SOOD, OmPrakash (Agra). STEWART, GeorgeRamsey(Sydney). STEWART, Ian Hector(WesternAustralia). STEWART, IanPark(Bristol). TAHSIN, Shevket ChaglarHassan(Bristol). *WANG, ManKin(University CollegeHospital). *BORS, Frank Howard (Sydney). *InOphthalmology. tInOtolaryngology. 123

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quite apocryphally-to have been made out of John Knox's trousers, and I sometimes thought that the . One lecture on the orthopaedic aspects of chondrodystrophies KORLEY, Ebenezer Krotelai (St. Thomas's). DORMANDY
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