Q. Can you tell me who it was furnished his Report?
A. I have the permission of the gentleman to give his name, Professor Gamgee, of Owen’s College, Manchester.
Mr. Waddy: What I should ask is that one might have an opportunity of calling Professor Gamgee.
Mr. Gully: I have my reasons for objecting to this. We have communicated with Professor Gamgee and I know very well that he will say precisely what was said by Dr. Roy.
“At a meeting of the Physiological Section of the International Medical Congress held in London in 1881, Professor Goltz exhibited a dog, and Professors Ferrier and Yeo a monkey; from the brain of the dog a large area of the cortex had been removed without producing any such effect as, according to Professor Goltz, would necessarily result if the theory, as usually held, of the localisation of function of the cortex were true; from the brain of the monkey a definite part of the so-called motor area had been removed, and a localised paralysis produced—a paralysis which, according to Professors Ferrier and Yeo, could not result if that theory were not true.”—“On the Cortical Areas removed from the Brain of a Dog and from the Brain of a Monkey” a Report by Dr. Klein, Mr. Langley, and Professor Schäfer, Journal of Physiology, Vol. IV., 1884, p. 231.
Yule, C. J. F. M.A.; Lecturer on Exper. Physiol., Magdalen Coll. Oxford.
Held a License for Vivisection at University Oxford Laboratory, Magdalen College in 1878 and 1882. Certificates for Illustrations of Lectures, 1878 and 1882.
Zander, Richard. M.D.; Prosect. Anatom. Inst., Königsberg, Prussia.
Contrib. to Centralblatt f. d. Med. Wissenchaften, 1879.