ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND

ANNALS OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND Editor: SIR CECIL WAKELEY, BT., K.B.E., C.B., LL.D., M.Ch., D.SC., F.R.C.S., F.R.S.E., F.F.R., F.D...
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ANNALS OF THE

ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND Editor: SIR CECIL WAKELEY, BT., K.B.E., C.B., LL.D., M.Ch., D.SC., F.R.C.S., F.R.S.E., F.F.R., F.D.S.R.C.S.

VOLUME 34

JANUARY-JUNE 1964

Published by THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS LONDON, W.C.2

CONTENTS VOLUME 34

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JANUARY-JUNE 1964

JANUARY 1964

.. .. THE TRAINING OF A SURGEON Miss J. Dobson .. LAMING EVANS RESEARCH FUND .. W. A. Law SURGICAL ASPECTS OF ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS APPOINTMENT OF FELLOWS AND MEMBERS TO CONSULTANT POSTS .. .. A. E. W. Miles THE ODONTOLOGICAL MUSEUM HEROES OF THE EXAMINATION BOOKS: 7. JOHN HARVEY.. SIR JAMES PAGET AND THE MUSEUM OF PATHOLOGY L. W. Proger .. INSTITUTE OF BASIC MEDICAL SCIENCES .. .. .. THE CANADIAN MACE.. PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN DECEMBER ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND DIPLOMA GRANTING CEREMONY .. PILOT SCHEME FOR SURGICAL TUTORS .. .. GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS DONATIONS .. .. .. .. DIARY FOR JANUARY .. DIARY FOR FEBRUARY.. .. .. ..

Page 1 36 37 49 50 58 59 61 63 64 66 70 73 75 76 76

FEBRUARY 1964 A. H. Galley THE DEBT OF ANAESTHESIA TO PHARMACY THE AETIOLOGY OF DIVERTICULOSIS OF THE COLON WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE ACTION OF CERTAIN DRUGS ON THE .. .. N. S. Painter .. BEHAVIOUR OF THE COLON HONOURS CONFERRED ON FELLOWS AND MEMBERS THE RELATIONSHIP OF VARIATIONS IN THE SIZE AND INCLINATION OF THE CALCANEUM TO THE SHAPE AND FUNCTION OF THE .. .. F. C. Dwyer .. .. .. WHOLE FOOT .. PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN JANUARY ADVICE FOR STONE IN THE BLADDER, A.D. 1637

William Davidson, M.D. DIARY FOR FEBRUARY DIARY FOR MARCH

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77

98 119

120 137 139 142 142

VOLUME 34 JANUARY-JUNE 1964

MARCH 1964

Page IDIOPATHIC NECROSIS OF THE FEMORAL HEAD IN ADULTS

R. Merle d'Aubigne RADICAL SURGERY FOLLOWING RADIATION TREATMENT FOR .. .. J. Stallworthy CERVICAL CARCINOMA .. .. GRANT OF DIPLOMAS TO FELLOWS IN DENTAL SURGERY .. .. A. B. MacGregor DIET AND DENTAL DISEASE IN GHANA THE DIAGNOSIS AND LIGATION OF INCOMPETENT ANKLE .. .. .. .. H. Dodd PERFORATING VEINS HEROES OF THE EXAMINATION BOOKS: 8. SIR THOMAS PASLEY .. .. J. Dobson WILLIAM CLIFT TO PHILIP SYNG PHYSICK .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. DONATIONS .. GRANT OF DIPLOMAS TO FELLOWS IN THE FACULTY OF ANAESTHETISTS

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143 161

178 179 186 196

197 203 204

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205 207 212 214 214 216

THE DESIGN OF OPERATING THEATRE SUITES (REPORT OF A COMMITTEE OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND)

217

.. .. .. IN MEMORIAM: T. B. LAYTON BOOKS ADDED TO THE LIBRARY: JULY-DECEMBER 1963 .. PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN FEBRUARY .. .. .. .. DIARY FOR MARCH .. .. . . .. .. DIARY FOR APRIL .. .. .. .. . DIARY FOR MAY

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APRIL 1964

VOLUME 34 JANUARY-JUNE 1964

MAY 1964

Page THE ROLE OF FIBRINOLYSIS IN THE TREATMENT OF ARTERIAL THROMBOSIS: EXPERIMENTAL AND CLINICAL ASPECTS M. J. Tsapogas PHYSIOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS IN THE SURGERY OF PEPTIC .. .. .. .. .. .. I. Orr ULCER .. .. .. ELECTION TO COUNCIL ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS OF CANADA .. .. .. .. .. VALEDICTORY .. .. C. Wells APPOINTMENT, OF FELLOWS AND MEMBERS TO CONSULTANT POSTS ..

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN MARCH .. PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN APRIL .. DIARY FOR MAY ..

DIARY

FOR

JUNE

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314 335 336 342 353 354 355

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293

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358 358

JUNE 1964 FREDERIC WOOD JONES AND THE HUNTERIAN TRADITION

Sir Cecil Wakeley .. .. .. ROYAL PHOTOGRAPHIC SOCIETY .. .. .. LEUCOPLAKIA BUCCALIS B. E. D. Cooke .. .. .. .. .. THE COLLEGE TIE THE USE OF A DYE DILUTION TECHNIQUE IN STUDIES OF BLOOD VOLUME AND CARDIAC OUTPUT DURING ANAESTHESIA AND .. .. .. .. .. J. P. Payne SURGERY .. APPOINTMENT OF FELLOWS AND MEMBERS TO CONSULTANT POSTS INTER-DEPARTMENTAL COLLOQUIUM: THE FUNCTION OF MUCUS

Sir Victor Negus ADMISSION TO THE HONORARY FELLOWSHIP AND TO THE COURT OF .. .. .. .. .. .. PATRONS THE LISTER FESTIVAL ..

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IN MEMORIAM: PROFESSOR G. PAYLING WRIGHT PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN MAY .. .. .. .. .. DONATIONS .. .. BACK NUMBERS OF THE ANNALS

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.. DIARY FOR JUNE .. DIARY FOR JULY INDEX TO VOLUME 34..

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359 369 370 383 384 399 400 404 409 414 416 418 419 419 419 420

SURGICAL ASPECTS OF ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS

ficed to some extent. This may be significant if the patient has to use crutches or sticks. There is still a great deal for us to learn in this problem of ankylosing spondylitis, both as regards aetiology and treatment. Some success has been achieved in rendering the lives of these unfortunate patients more tolerable by earlier, and more widespread surgery and better diagnosis is doing a great deal to prevent severe and disabling deformities; but all too frequently the demand for difficult reconstructive surgery is apparent, and can be dramatically well worth while. In conclusion I would like to thank the many colleagues who have so kindly helped me to build up this series of cases, and I would like to pay a tribute to the skill of the anaesthetists, nursing and physiotherapy staffs in their handling of these rigidly deformed patients. REFERENCES BECHTEREW, W. von (1893) Neutrol. Cenitralbl. 12, 426. FOCK, C. (186 1) Arch. klin. Chir. 1, 172. GIRDLESTONE, G. R. (1928) Robert Jotnes Birthdtayv Volume. London, Oxford Univ. Press. LA CHAPELLE, E. H. (I1946) J. Bolie Jt. SUng. 28, 85 1. LAW, W. A. (1959) J. Bonte Jt. Sirg. 41B, 270. (1962) J. Bonie Jt. Suirg. 44A, 11 99. (1962) J. Boiie .t. Sirg. 44A, 1497. MARIE, P. (1898) Rei. Mdecine, 18, 285. MASON, R. M. (1963) Personal communicationi. ROMANUS, R. (1953) Acta nmedl. scandc. SUPP. 280. SHIERS, L. G. P. (1954) J. Bolne Jt. Slurg. 36B, 553. SMITH-PETERSEN, M. N. (1939) J. Bonie Jt. Surg. 21, 269. - LARSON, C. B., and AUFRANC, 0. E. (1945) J. Bonie Jt. Suirg. 27, 1. Voss, C. (1955) Tagutng cltseh. Ges. Orthopdclie, Hamburg. WATSON-JONES, R. (1963) Personal communication.

APPOINTMENT OF FELLOWS AND MEMBERS TO CONSULTANT POSTS K. R. ALIMCHANDANI, F.R.C.S. E. DAYAN, F.R.C.S.

Honorary Assistant Obstetrician and Gynaecologist, St. George's Hospital and National Hospital, Bombay. Consultant Surgeon, South Shields Group of Hospitals.

49

THE CANADIAN MACE

"The Staff is plain, with two bosses, the lower of which bears an inscription recording the Donors. The ' Heel', which represents the last survival of the old fighting weapon, is decorated on the upper surface with alternating Maple leaves and Fleurs de lys; on the lower part the Caduceus and Serpent emblem is repeated.

1 ~~~~~~ Fig. 2. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother being shown the Mace by Sir Russell Brock, President, during her visit to the College on 3rd December 1963.

"The Mace is made of silver and has a heavy gold deposit: its weight is 135 troy ozs. and its length 3 ft. 8 ins." Figure 2 shows Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother inspecting the Mace before its despatch to Canada. PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN DECEMBER AT AN EXTRAORDINARY Meeting of the Council on 11th December 1963, with Sir Russell Brock, President, in the Chair, Diplomas of Fellowship were granted to the candidates named in the enclosed Report, and Diplomas were presented (see full report on page 66). 64

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN DECEMBER

At a Meeting of the Council on 12th December 1963, with Sir Russell Brock, President, in the Chair, the Hallett Prize was presented to Dr. W. G. Prout, M.B., B.S., of St. Thomas's Hospital Medical School. The Begley Prize was presented to Dr. J. G. Purdell-Lewis, M.R.C.S., of the Westminster Hospital Medical College. The award of the Evelyn Sprawson Prize to J. D. Gullan-Whur and R. P. Juniper, both of Guy's Hospital Dental School, was noted. The following were appointed Surgical Tutors in the Regions under the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust Pilot Scheme: N.E. Metropolitan: Mr. A. G. Dingley, F.R.C.S. (Southend) Mr. J. Clapham Coates, F.R.C.S. (Hull and Leeds: East Riding) Mr. J. H. Shoesmith, F.R.C.S. (Leeds) The appointment of Dr. J. W. Thompson, M.B., B.S. (Senior Lecturer in the Department of Pharmacology), to the Chair of Pharmacology in the University of Newcastle, was noted. Mr. H. G. E. Arthure, F.R.C.S., was re-appointed as representative on the Central Midwives Board. Mr. L. E. C. Norbury, O.B.E., F.R.C.S., was re-appointed as representative on the Council of the Queen's Institute of District Nursing. Sir Stanford Cade, K.B.E., C.B., F.R.C.S., was re-appointed as examiner in General Surgery for the Fellowship of the Faculty of Radiologists. The Council concurred with the recommendation of the Working Party on Accident Prevention and Life-Saving for the establishment of a permanent medical commission. The Council nominated for the award of a Prophit Studentship Mr. Colin John Smith, L.D.S.R.C.S., B.D.S., for work on cancer research in the Department of Dental Science. One Licence in Dental Surgery was granted. The following hospitals were recognized under paragraph 23 of the Fellowship regulations:

*WEST

POSTS RECOGNIZED (All 12 months unless otherwise stated) General Unspecified Casualty (all 6 months) Surgery S.H.O. (Gen. & Cas.) now recognized S.H.O. S.H.O. (6 months) Untder para. 23 (c) Regr. (E.N.T.) H.S. (E.N.T.)

*COLCHESTER-Essex County Hospital and Severalls Mental

S.H.O.

HOSPITALS BROMWICH and District General Hospital (change in duties) *INVERNESS-Royal Northern Infirmary

Hospital Surgical Unit LUSAKA-Central Hospital

Senior H.S. Junior R.M.O. (6 months)

Senior H.S.

(Cas.)

*Other posts have previously been recognized at these

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Under para. 23 (b) Senior H.S. (Ophth.)

hospitals.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COUNCIL IN DECEMBER

After the meeting a Hunterian Lecture was delivered by Professor J. Stallworthy on " Radical surgery following radiation treatment for cervical carcinoma". ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND DIPLOMA GRANTING CEREMONY THE ANNUAL MEETING of Fellows and Members was held in the College on Wednesday, I1 th December 1963. The first event of the day was a diploma granting ceremony held in the Edward Lumley Hall at 11.30 a.m., which was attended by diplomates who had been successful in the several examinations of the College during the past six months, accompanied by their relatives and friends. After welcoming the diplomates and their visitors to the College, the President (Sir Russell Brock) reminded the assembled company that the occasion was, in fact, an extraordinary meeting of the Council, in order that the Council might grant diplomas to the candidates who had been successful in the Final Fellowship examination held since the meeting of the Council in November (see Pass list on page 73), and this approval was granted on the motion of Sir Clement Price Thomas, senior Vice-President. Diplomas were then presented to new Fellows and Members, Fellows and Licentiates in Dental Surgery, and Fellows in the Faculty of Anaesthetists. At the request of the President, the President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, Mr. J. J. Mason Brown, then gave an Address to the diplomates, in which he said: " Mr. President, Members of Council, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is a great honour for the President of a sister College to address those attending this most impressive and moving ceremony. In thanking you, Mr. President, I and the College I now represent would like to take this, our first opportunity, of wishing you well in your new office, and to say how very delighted I am to be honoured with this invitation at this, your first diploma granting ceremony. But in this hall I would also like to say thank you to your immediate past-President, for he showed me great friendship and understanding when I was a very new President, and I shall always be grateful to him. " My first duty, and a very pleasant one, is to congratulate all those who have received their diplomas to-day. Some of you have merely reached the first milestone that allows you to practise medicine or dentistry; others have not been content to rest there but have continued their training and their studies and have taken a higher and more specialized qualification. It may be that some of you found the road a little longer and a little more tortuous than others; some of you have had to contend with difficulties of language, some have had to adapt themselves to the British way of life and even to the British climate. But to-day 1 am sure that all those difficulties are forgotten and I am quite certain that you now wonder why you did not think more kindly of the Court of Examiners! But to those of you who found the way a little hard I would offer consolation, for it has been said that 'examinations are formidable, even to the best prepared, for the greatest fool may ask more than the wisest man can answer'. I would also like to point out to you that a certain delay in overcoming examination hurdles has never been a bar to success in medicine or surgery, or to high office, and it

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ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND DIPLOMA GRANTING CEREMONY

often leads to a respected place in the Councils of the profession. To-day is your day: a day in which we here share the pride and the happiness of those relatives and friends who have been able to come and see you receive your diplomas from the President. " I would like to say something to those of you who have received your diplomas. This College is justly proud of its long history and traditions and of its many pioneers of surgery who have learned, worked and taught within its walls and of its influence in the surgical councils in the English-speaking world. This College is not pre-occupied with surgery alone, its interests extend to the basic sciences, to dental surgery, to anaesthetics and to other specialties. As far back as 1841, George Waite, a member of the College, suggested that no-one should be allowed to practise dentistry without passing an examination conducted by a board composed of members of the College who practised dentistry. The College was perhaps a little slow in this matter, because it was 19 years before the L.D.S. diploma was introduced, but nevertheless it is the oldest dental qualification in the world. The Council considered the need for a higher dental qualification and, thanks to the vision of a committee presided over by Wilfrid Trotter, only the war delayed the institution of the Fellowship in Dental Surgery, which was inaugurated in 1947. " The increasing interest, the need for specialization and the growing complexity of the techniques of anaesthesia were responsible for the institution of the Diploma in Anaesthetics in 1935. Possibly because the anaesthetist tends to engender a greater peace of mind in a surgeon than the dentist, it only took one year after the suggestion for the Faculty of Anaesthetists to be inaugurated in 1948. " Mr. President, you did not invite a stranger to tell you or an audience such as this of the achievements of the College, and I have mentioned these facts principally because to-day I wish to speak more to the diplomates in dentistry and anaesthetics. " To the Members I would say welcome to the profession of medicine and to the preregistration year. You have deliberately chosen a profession that knows no fixed hours, a profession that demands self-discipline and, although you have been better trained scientifically than any of your teachers were, you have still much to learn. I remind you of these words from Tristram Shandy: ' Sciences may be learned by rote, but wisdom not.' In the next year or two you have to gain experience and face important decisions, you will have to decide which branch of medicine you wish to follow. The choice should be that branch in which you are most interested and in which you will find contentment, and you should not think of the possible financial rewards. " The licentiates in dental surgery have no compulsory pre-registration year to face, and so can go straight into practice in the sure knowledge that hard work will bring financial reward. 1 wonder if youth is the time to spend long hours at the chairside with the prospect that this will be the unending scene of your practising life. Dental surgery has made such rapid advances that it urgently requires young men to study dentistry academically and scientifically and to do research, and it is therefore very gratifying to see so many Fellows in Dental Surgery here to-day. I feel that this is something where we perhaps might help you. It should be possible for the young men in dentistry to take up an academic or research career without suffering undue financial hardship. " To the anaesthetists I would like to offer the thanks both of the patient and of the surgeon. A former President of this College once said: ' We have made surgery safe for the patient, let us now make the patient safe for surgery.' The responsibility for this lies with anaesthetists, whose skill has made possible major advances in surgery, and who are now equal partners in surgical operations. The anaesthetist has contributed very greatly to the care of the head injury, in thoracic injuries and in tetanus, and has made possible the very great advances in medicine and surgery. These young anaesthetists here to-day should have time away from the operating rooms in order to pursue investigations and so further anaesthetic discoveries. " To the new Fellows in surgery, you can now say: 'I am a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.' This-means that you have a sound scientific background and a knowledge of the principles and practice of surgery. And to these young Fellows I would say that I am sure all here to-day envy you the opportunities for the advancement in surgery in the future which will be mostly yours.

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All of you who have received your diplomas to-day have had the best training and the best teaching that have so far been devised, but a diploma does not mean that you know everything. It merely means that you know enough. To-day we say to many of you ' Hail and farewell', for you will go from here to the far ends of the earth. Remember always that this College will be your Alma Mater, of which you will always be justly proud. Practise your various branches of medicine so that the College can be justly proud of you. Never be afraid to own that you do not know, provided that not knowing is the spur to finding out. Medicine knows no barriers of race, country, colour or creed; medicine in one country gladly shares its new-found knowledge with other countries. Remember always that although medicine has become more rational and more scientific it cannot be governed only by science; for most of you medicine will mean the care of the patient and to your scientific knowledge you must add gentleness, consideration, understanding and humanity, for the greatest reward for any of you is the gratitude of your patients. " As I watched so many of you receiving your diplomas this morning at a ceremony that will remain one of the happiest memories of your professional lives, I thought that "

mii

Mr. Mason Brown addressing the diplomates. we might well learn from it. This gathering of young doctors and dentists and specialists at the beginning of their careers should give all of us the incentive to continue to meet as amiably as we do to-day and to work for a common purpose of medicine, and to cease from criticising each other's work both in committee and in the medical press. This College occupies its high position in the medical and surgical world because so many of its Members and Fellows were not content merely to take away from it but to put back into it something of their work and interest. As we wish you ' God speed ' this morning, I would ask you to remember that the future of medicine and of the College depends on what you younger Members and Fellows can contribute to it."

A vote of thanks to Mr. Mason Brown was then moved by Sir Clement Price Thomas, who also said that if the new diplomates followed the dicta of Mr. Mason Brown, not only would they do no wrong, but they would add lustre to the profession. During the afternoon the research work of the College was demonstrated in the seven scientific departments, and the Hunterian Museum was open to visitors. 68

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING AND DIPLOMA GRANTING CEREMONY

The Annual General Meeting was held in the Edward Lumley Hall at 3.30 p.m. After welcoming those present, the President presented the Annual Report for 1962/63 and expressed the hope that it would be read fully by all Fellows and Members as it contained details of the vast amount of both educational and research work being carried out in the College, of which a large number of Fellows were unaware. Sir Russell mentioned the fact that the postwar buildings had now been completed, and referred to the official opening of the new Hunterian Museum by Mr. Harold Macmillan, then Prime Minister, in May of this year, and went on to speak of the success of the combined Chair of Military Surgery between the College and the Royal Army Medical College and the decision that a combined Chair of Naval Surgery would be set up in the near future by the College and the Royal Navy. The President said that the greatest problem of the College was in the matter of finance, as there was still a large annual deficit which was a matter of great concern, and a Working Party had been set up to study the finances of the College and to see that it was being run in the most economical way possible. Nevertheless the Council had decided that a forward-looking policy was essential: if the College were to leave further expansion until it had solved its present financial difficulties it would lie completely dormant for at least 25 years. The Council would ensure that all new developments were entirely selfsupporting, and the President mentioned plans for the renovation and expansion of the Buckston Browne Farm. There being no questions, the Report was adopted. Mr. Harold Edwards then spoke on the training of surgeons, and referred to the work of the committee considering this matter and to the Panel of Advisers from Regional Hospitals who were helping the College in their deliberations. He went on to mention both the intra- and extra-mural teaching activities of the College, and referred to the three-year pilot scheme for Surgical Tutors in each of the Regions, whereby the Tutor in each Region was responsible for the surgical training of Registrars in his area. This pilot scheme had been financed by the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust.

There was a large audience for the Bradshaw Lecture which was delivered at 5 p.m. by Sir Clement Price Thomas, K.C.V.O., Senior Vice-President, who spoke on " Pulmonary tuberculosis in retrospect and prospect". It is hoped to publish this lecture in the Annals at a future date.

The monthly dinner of the College was held in the Edward Lumley Hall in the evening, at which there was a full complement of guests. After the dinner the President spoke of the activities of the College in relationship to postgraduate education. 69

PILOT SCHEME FOR SURGICAL TUTORS

Conclusion It should be clearly understood that the pilot scheme in each Region is not intended to cover the whole Region. In some Regions it may be confined to one hospital or a group of hospitals, and the surgical tutors have not been asked to inaugurate a comprehensive service. The essence of having 15 different pilot schemes is the opportunity these give for a variety of different methods of approach to be studied. It is hoped that all Fellows of the College will take an interest in the scheme and give any help they may be asked for in implementing it. They are also asked to bring the scheme to the attention of their surgical trainees, whom it is designed to help. GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS AT THE RECENT Final Examination for the Fellowship, 12 candidates out of 38 were successful in Ophthalmology, eight candidates out of 32 in Otolaryngology, and 120 out of 529 in General Surgery. At an extraordinary meeting of Council on 1th December 1963, Diplomas of Fellowship were granted to the following: LiSHMAN, Ian Valentine (Liverpool). LACEY, Ronald Arthur (Charing Cross). LIVINGSTON, Alexander (St. Thomas's). SEWELL, Ivor Alwyne (Kings' College). *WATSON, Peter Gordon (University College). MULHOLLAND, Robert Charles (The London). HIGTON, Desmond Ian Ralph (King's College). WHITFIELD, Patrick John (St. George's). KORSAH, Kweku Gyandoh (Guy's). DAVIS, Patrick William (Birmingham). GOLBY, Michael Geoffrey Smythe (Birminighani). MAY, Roy Edward (Middlesex). COLTON, Christopher Lewis (St. Thomas's). SNELL, Michael Edward (St. Marn's).

tSACK, Raphael (Witwatersrand). SLATER, Russel Bell (Durham). KASUDIA, Trambaklal Bhailal (Bombay). *ISMAIL, Abdel Magid Abdel Rahman (Cairo). KHAN, Sulaiman Ahmad (Punjab). RIFAAT, Mohamed Abdelazim (Cairo). tFlGGINS, Loris Freda (Melbourne). tDURCAN, Dermot Joseph (The Londoni). ROBERTSON, Colin (Birmingham). SARKAR, Sankar Das (Calcutta). SAUNDERS, Ronald Herbert (Melbourne). STEWART, John Stewart Simpson (Glasgow). ABOULATA, Mohammed Mahmoud (Cairo). CHAKRABARTY, Ajay Kumar (Calcutta). CONNOLLY, John Anthony (Sydney). *JONES, David Edgar Peter (Westminster). MARTIN, Derek Arnold Smart (Oxford). MOFFAT, William Cameron (Glasgow). NOTT, Malcolm George (Madras). * In Ophthalmology. - In Otolaryngology.

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: Woman.

GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS

SANDEMAN, John Charles (Witwatersrand). *SIKKA, Om Prakash (Lucknow). *tDAVIES, Doris May (Birmingham). LAKHTAKIA, Hari Shanker (Agra). WILLIAMS, John Hartley (Melbourne). BHANA, Dayal (Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in Irelandl). DUARI, Monoranjan (Calcutta). GALLETT, Joseph Philippe (Durham). HIERONS, Charles Douglas (Durham). HOBBS, John Thomas (St. Bartholomew's). PETTIT, Kenneth Edward (Melbourne). SUTCLIFFE, Michael Matthew Lister (Universitiy College). ASLAM, Mohammad (Punjab). BERKLEY, Reginald Maurice (Melbourne). *BLAKE, John James (Cork). BOSE, Abhijit (Calcutta). CAMPBELL, William Alexander (Queensland). CHHATBAR, Dahyalal Ranchhoddas (Bombav). CHOUBEY, Ramendra Nath (Patna). EDIBAM, Ratan Cavashah (Nagpur). HANSEN, Lawrence Herbert (New Zealand). KELLY, Langton Edmund Patrick (Queensland). *KELSEY, John Hugh (University College). KULKARNI, Vijay (Nagpur). fLEVIT, Joseph (Cape Town). PAWAR, Bhaskarrao Dayaram (Bombay). SATPATHY, Ramesh Chandra (Utkal). SCHOFIELD, Philip Furness (Manchester). SHUKLA, Ramshankar (Nagpur). SURAL, Amitabha (Calcutta). *ADRIANWALA, Soli Dara (Bombay). ANSARI, Mohamed Nasim (Calcutta). BARHAM, Kevin Albert (Melbourne). BEWES, Peter Cecil (St. Thomas's). BIRD, Alistair Duncan (New Zealand). GHOSH, Mriganka Sekhar (Calcutta). HONEIN, Elias Farid (Cairo). JAMES, Adolf Frederick (Osmania). KERSHAW, Will Wear (Leeds). KHALID, Tamton (Andhra). LO, Wan Shun (Hong Kong). McCAFFREY, John Francis (Queensland). MAHESON, Vallipuram Subramaniam (Ceylon). *MITRA, Amal Kumar (Calcutta). NARAYANAN, Perathur Srinivasachari (Madras). O'DWYER, Patrick Francis (Queensland). PAREED PILLAY, Manadath Kader (Kerala). PARK, John Connell (Belfast). PATEL, Vithalbhai Chhotabhai (Bombay). *RIZK, Samir Nessim Morcos (Cairo). ROBINSON, Philip Waldo (New Zealand). ROPER, Brian Arnold (University College). SHENOI, Pundalika Mangalpady (Andhra). SLAPAK, Maurice (Westminster). STUCHBERY, Kenneth Edmund (Melbourne). YOUNG, Terence Willifer (The London). AYE, Maung Maung (Rangoon). BAKHRU, Moti Naraindas (Bombay). BOTTING, Terence David John (Birmingham). tCLARK, Graeme Milbourne (Sydney). COHEN, David Julius (Queensland). * Woman, t In Otolaryngology. * In Ophthalmology.

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GRANT OF FELLOWSHIP DIPLOMAS

tDUNSHEA, Malcolm Gordon (New Zealand). NARGOLWALA, Viraf Sorabji (Osmania). PARSONS, Derek Walter (University College). ROSENBERG, Mervyn Theodore (Witwatersrand). ROYLE, John Peterson (Melbourne). SARMA, Kundurty Purnananda (Calcutta). tSINGH, Sukh Dev. (Punjab). SPENCER, John (Charing Cross). STRANGWARD, Richard West (Melbourne). *WATSON, David Malcolm (St. Thomas's). YATES, Alan Kenneth (Sheffield). ALLEN, Donald Edward (New Zealandl). ARONEY, Michael (Queensland). ATTYGALLE, Lakshman Sujeeva (Ceylon). CHANDRA, Chowdhari Prakash (Lucknow). CHARLTON, Clive Arthur Cyril (St. Bartholomew's). CHONG, John Kenneth Kwok-Hoe (St. Bartholomew's). CLELAND, John (Belfast). DEAL, Cedric William (Sydney). DRAZ, Abdallah Said (Cairo). EZZAT, Farouk Amin (Cairo). GEAR, Michael William Leishman (Kinig's College). GLICK, Selwyn (Birmingham). JHAWER, Pramod Kumar (Vikram). MERCER, John Laurence (St. Thomas's). tNASH, Philip Llewellyn (Adelaide). NEELY, Julian Alexander Cavendish (St. Bartholornew's). PAL, Jatindra Chandra (Calcutta). SAMARJI, William Norman (Bombay). *SANDHU, Bachittar Singh (Punjab). SEBUWUFU, Peter Hermit (East Africa). SHAIKH, Abdur Rauf (Karachi). SOMASUNDARAM, Kylasa (Ceylon). STAER, Peter Alfred (Adelaide). WRIGHT, Earle Stanley (McGill). tBEAUMONT, Gordon Dean (Adelaide). BUCKLEY, Timothy Francis (Cork). HAMILTON, Ronald William (The London). KHAN, Zafar Aziz (Punjab). McKEOWN, Diarmid Ronald (Sydne!v). OMO-DARE, Paul (Birmingham). WAN, James Wai Hung (Hong Kong). WINSEY, Harold Stuart (The London). CATTERALL, Anthony (University College). TAYLOR, John Hermon (The London). * In Ophthalmology. t In Otolaryngology.

DONATIONS DURING THE LAST few weeks the following generous donations have been received: Donations:

£200 £52 lOs. £50 £5 £3 lOs. Od.

Reckitt & Colman Holdings Limited (further gift) Mrs. A. E. Godsmark Mr. A. E. Godsmark Mrs. F. Benan (further gift) M. G. Tennant, Esq. H. C. Beaumont, Esq. (further gift)

75

DONATIONS

Voluntary annual subscriptions and ionations by Fellows and Members: The following Fellows and Members of the College, Fellows in Dental Surgery, and Fellows in the Faculty of Anaesthetists have generously given donations or have undertaken to make a voluntary annual subscription under Covenant to the College: N. H. Bloom, F.F.A.R.C.S. Professor S. A. Fleming, F.F.A.R.C.S. Mortimer Burdman, F.R.C.S. D. A. Sherman, F.F.A.R.C.S. R. V. Cooke, F.R.C.S. J. H. Shoesmith, F.R.C.S. Joan Dunn, F.F.A.R.C.S. Professor R. Milnes Walker, F.R.C.S. Harold Edwards, C.B.E., F.R.C.S.

DIARY FOR JANUARY Thurs.

16

Fri.

17

Wed.

22

Mon. Tues.

27 28

5.00

5.00 4.00 5.00

PROFESSOR P. P. RICKHAM-Hunterian Lecture-Permanent deviation of the urinary stream in childhood. Basic Sciences Lectures and Demonstrations and Basic Sciences Lectures and Demonstrations for Dental Students end. Facultv of Anaesthetists Voting Papers issued. Board of Faculty of Dental Surgery. Board of Hunterian Trustees. DR. CYRIL LONG-Arnott Demonstration-The erythrocyte membrane. Primary F.R.C.S. Examination and D.O. Examination begin. Final L.D.S. Examination (Part 1) begins.

DIARY FOR FEBRUARY Mon.

3

Tues. Thurs.

4 6

5.00

5.30 Mon.

10

Tues.

11

5.00 Wed. Thurs.

12 13

Fri. Mon.

14 17

7.30 2.00

5.00

5.00

Tues.

18

Wed.

19

5.00

ThUrs. 20 Mon.

5.00

24

5.00

D.Phys.Med. Examination (Part I) begins. Basic Sciences Lectures and Demonstrations begin. Final L.D.S. Examination (Part Jl) begins. MR. ADRIAN MARSTON-Arris and Gale Lecture-Intestinal ischaemia. PROFESSOR P. L. MOLLISON-Otolaryngology Lecture-Blood transfusion problems. Primary F.D.S. Examination, D.M.R.D. Examination (Part l) and D.M.R.T. Examination (Part 1) begin. D.Phys.Med. Examination (Part 11) begins. DR. R. A. B. DRURY-Erasmus Wilson Demonstration-Mixed tumours and carcino-sarcoma. Monthly dinner. Council. SIR BENJAMIN RYCROFT-Hunterian Lecture-Contemporary views on the surgery and biology of the corneal graft. John Hunter born 1728. D.T.M. & H. Examination begins. Course in Clinical Surgery begins. PROFESSOR ARNOLD SORSBY-Ophthalmology Lecture-Syndromes with corneal lesions. PROFESSOR ARNOLD SORSBY-Ophthalmology Lecture-Resection: 100 years after Donder's treatise. D.M.R.D. Examination (Part 11) begins. DR. S. J. SURTEEs-Erasmus Wilson Demonstration-Aspects of diagnosis in diabetes mellitus. PROFESSOR L. D. ABRAMS-Hunterian Lecture-The repair of tetralogy of Fallot. D.Orth. Examination and D.M.R.T. Examination (Part II) begin.

76

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