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Prize For Medicine With Camillo: In 1906, Ramon y Cajal shared the Nobel Prize for medicine with Camillo Golgi, whose silver-stain method for staining nervous Tissue he had adopted and improved. This started his exploration of the structure of the cerebellum and the cerebrum and led to great cytological discoveries related to the nervous system. He demonstrated the termination of the nerve fibers in the gray matter, and described for the first time the true relationship of nerve fiber to nerve cell.
Despite a career limited by an almost fatal automobile accident, he became, in the view of many professional players, the most polished hitter of a golf ball who ever lived. Hogan's career reached its zenith in 1953, when he won the Masters, the U. S. Open, and the British Open.Americans dominated most golf tournaments after World War II. The most exciting player was Arnold Palmer, of Latrobe, Pa., who exhibited the most dashing style of play since Tom 30LGI, gol'je Camillo (1844-1926), Italian listologist and pathologist, who was awarded he 1906 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine, ilong with Santiago Ramon y Cajal, "in recogni-ion of their work on the structure of the nervous ystem."
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 bestowed "for their discoveries concerning the primary chemical and physiological visual processes in the eye." (1) Ragnar Granit, a Swedish neurophysiologist, taught at the Universities of 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 impulses in the complex cell network of the retina. (2)
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