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Light Minutes of the 10th
Symposium held at the Royal Danish School of Pharmacy in Copenhagen from Monday
29th July to Friday 2nd August, 1974
GEOFFREY B.WEST
The meeting opened with a
reception at the Copenhagen City Hall on Monday evening. We were received by the
Deputy Mayor of Copenhagen, who himself is a medical man interested in allergy.
After an elegant speech of welcome and advice, we settled down to a magnificent
buffet supper amply displayed in one of the upstairs council chambers. Typical
of our members, the comment most commonly heard that night was "How lucky
we haven’t fed today?" But, seriously, the spread was first-class and
naturally it was washed down with Tuborg beer. We thank the organisers of the
symposium for arranging such a treat for us. The evening closed with us signing
the visitors’ book and being shown round the suite of council rooms on the
first floor.
On Tuesday, whilst the members
got down to the problems of "Purification and Standardization of
Allergens" and "New Diagnostic Procedures in Allergology", the
ladies were swept away on an interesting North Zealand excursion. This covered
Frederiksborg Castle, Fredensborg Castle, Kronborg Castle at Elsinore, and the
Louisiana Art Gallery at Humlebak. Back at the lecture hall, the workers had
been applauding first Paul Kallós for his wonderful gift to the CIA of an
ebony gavel, suitably inscribed in silver to commemorate 20 years of life, and
second the Carl Prausnitz Memorial Lecture of Otto Westphal. Zoltan Ovary
introduced the speaker by telling us of Otto’s superb immunochemical work on
the elucidation of the antigen’s structure of the cell wall of Salmonella,
carried out at the Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology at Freiburg, Zoltan
added that at this institute the enthusiastic atmosphere created by Otto makes
it the joy of all who have the good fortune to work there. Then followed the
Second Memorial Lecture with the chosen subject of endotoxin. Otto delivered the
lecture with wonderful clarity and eloquence and we are very indebted to him for
giving the symposium such a good start. The day finished with the
"Collegium’s General Business Meeting" at which the chief item of
interest was, I think, the request for a revision of our constitution and rules.
It appeared we had been awarding honorary and life memberships quite
unconstitutionally and therefore hypothetically and this certainly needed
correction, as did terms of office of officials.
Wednesday was next, and what a
day it was to be! All of us (even our wives) met at Havnegade to cross by
hydrofoil to Malmö in Sweden. The trip took 35 minutes and all I can remember
is a group of 30 of us on deck being ushered down below - it was too
dangerous for allergists to be on high places in those waters. Whilst the
members were taken to Lund Hospital for discussions on Urticaria, the ladies
visited Lund Cathedral, Svaneholm Castle (where venison was served) and the
Kulturen Museum. The weather was fine on this day and this was an ideal setting
for a late afternoon cocktail party at the house of member Rorsman in Lund.
Incidentally, the ladies had been told that the gentlemen will join in, and we
sure did, admiring both the house and the garden and enjoying the superb
hospitality. Buses took us back to Malmö for the boat to Copenhagen, during
which time (about an hour and a half) dinner was served on board.
Thursday was wet - very
wet - but that did not deter us having an interesting day discussing
"Different Aspects of Reaginic Allergy" whilst the ladies had their
hair shampooed and set for the evening. Four fine lectures by members Ishizaka,
Uvnäs, Lichtenstein and Diamant contributed much to the success of this day.
The banquet at the Belle
Terrasse Restaurant started at 7:30 p.m. and finished at midnight when we were
thrown out by the Tivoli authorities. Over 150 attended, so you can be sure it
was an outstanding event. It couldn’t have been otherwise, with a Menu of
Coquille de Fletan St. Malo, Filet de Veau Gormet, Glace de Vanille Bernois, and
Mocca, and with suitable red and white wines and port and liquers. One of the
highlights of the evening was a Fur Fashion Show by Baug, when all of us saw and
admired some furs valued at well over F 3,000. Most of us, however, were jealous
of one of our members - in fact, he was one of the organisers of the
symposia - who sat purposely at the end of a table so that he could stroke
the furs and the wearers of them as they passed by. Lots of other things
happened that night - presentation to Paul for his great services to the
collegium, (he incidentally let Liselotte, his wife, have two glasses of wine
that night) and presentations of life membership certificates to Paul, Aurelio
Cerletti and Otto Westphal, and of certificates to 18 new members (with some
comments from some wives about why they married allergists). David Harley, our
first president, was unable to be present on account of illness, but we honoured
him, too, for all his efforts and guidance over the past 20 years. One was
reminded of that old Persian Apophthegm - a pointed saying embodying an
important truth in a few words:
- He who knows not and
knows not that he knows not is a fool - shun him;
- He who knows not and
knows that he knows not is weak - help him;
- He who knows and knows
not that he knows is asleep - wake him;
- But he who knows and
knows that he knows is wise - follow him.
And we follow you, David, and
recognise the great and unique achievements in establishing the collegium and
making it such an important organisation. Also at the banquet, we had speeches,
songs, stories (high and low), verses, action rhymes, and amusing experiences.
Lack of a microphone as well as division of the guests into two distinct but
unequal sections by a barrier - sort of mast cell membrane with pores in
it - did not deter the relaxed atmosphere of everyone contributing to a
most successful evening.
Finally, to the last day when
"The role of B and T lymphocytes and other lymphocytic populations in
allergic reactions" were discussed, starting with a great effort from Jack
Miller from Melbourne. He was followed by member Turk (who had just arrived
- in fact he came the night before, especially for the meal) and member Dukor, our new treasurer. After coffee, our secretary Alain de Weck was just
telling us about his views of lymphocyte stimulation when he triggered off the
fuses and we were all in the Black Hole of Calcutta. The chairman asked Alain if
he wished to continue but wisely he said No, and so lunch was taken a little
early. The afternoon session closed about 3 o’clock with sincere thanks to the
organising committee of the 10th symposium -
Members:
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B. Diamant
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N. Hjorth
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P. Kallós
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H. Rorsman
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Post-Script
Allergists of the utmost fame
Were called at once. But when
they came
They answered as they took
their fees
There is no cure for this
disease.
P.P.S.
Did anyone know that one of the
speakers at the Lund meeting on Wednesday tested the efficiency of the
Copenhagen Riggs-Hospitalet by becoming a patient in the intensive care unit
with a suspected coronary attack after taking 37 aspirin tablets?
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