Some pharmacological history: an exam from 1959

Last year, I was sent my answer paper for one of my final exams, taken in 1959. This has triggered a bout of shamelessly autobiographical nostalgia. The answer sheets that I wrote had been kept by one of my teachers at Leeds, Dr George Mogey. After he died in 2003, aged 86, his widow, Audrey, found them and sent them to me. And after a hunt through the junk piled high in my office, I found the exam papers from that year too. George Mogey was an excellent teacher and a kind man. He gave most of the lectures to medical students, which we, as pharmacy/pharmacology students attended. His lectures were inspirational. Photo from his daughter, Nora Mogey Today, 56 years on, I can still recall vividly his lecture on anti-malarial drugs. At the end he paused dramatically and said "Since I started speaking, 100 people have died from malaria" (I don’t recall the exact number). He was the perfect antidote to people who say you learn nothing from lectures. Straight after the war (when he had seen the problem of malaria at first hand) he went to work at the Wellcome Research Labs in Beckenham, Kent. The first head of the Wellcome Lab was Henry Dale. It had a distinguished record of basic research as well as playing a crucial role in vaccine production and in development of the safe use of digitalis. In the 1930s it had an important role in the development of proper methods for biological standardisation. This was crucial for ensuring that, for exam...
Source: DC's goodscience - Category: Professors and Educators Authors: Tags: B.L. Welch George Mogey H.O. Schild Pharmacology statistics University of Leeds inference J.W. Trevan UCL University College London Source Type: blogs