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Examples

  • Why was Macleod included, and why was not only Charles Best but also James Collip excluded?

    August Krogh and the Nobel Prize to Branting and MacLeod 2001

  • Thus, Paulescu was never nominated; Collip and Best were nominated but not until

    August Krogh and the Nobel Prize to Branting and MacLeod 2001

  • Banting and Best's discovery in 1921-1922 revolutionised the course of diabetes, but it was a biochemist from the University of Alberta, James Bertram Collip, who contributed very greatly to that with his use of alcohol to extract insulin from the pancreas and allow the blood sugar to fall for the very first time in a 14year-old boy.

    Islet Transplant - Towards a Cure for Diabetes 2000

  • In 1969, Dr. Platon Collip attempted to demonstrate that prayer on behalf of children with leukemia would improve their survival.

    The Best Alternative Medicine Dr. Kenneth R. Pelletier 2000

  • In 1969, Dr. Platon Collip attempted to demonstrate that prayer on behalf of children with leukemia would improve their survival.

    The Best Alternative Medicine Dr. Kenneth R. Pelletier 2000

  • He crossed the seething water and found the South Essex's Quartermaster, a plump officer named Collip who had accompanied the half battalion on its night-time march.

    Sharpe's Honour Cornwell, Bernard 1985

  • He had gone ahead to show them the path they must take, and he had left Collip, with the Lieutenants, to bring the men on.

    Sharpe's Honour Cornwell, Bernard 1985

  • He had gone back and discovered Collip at the edge of a deep ravine that had been crossed with harsh difficulty.

    Sharpe's Honour Cornwell, Bernard 1985

  • This was accomplished by Collip, and the name insulin was decided upon for the purified extract.

    John Macleod - Nobel Lecture 1965

  • Later it was shown, in collaboration with Collip, that other symptoms of diabetes, namely the ketonuria and the absence of glycogen from the liver, were favourably influenced by the extracts and, with Hepburn, that the respiratory quotient became raised.

    John Macleod - Nobel Lecture 1965

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