LIFESAVER IN A LAB COAT
Dr. Best of the Banting-Best insulin team today leads a crack squad of fighters against the diseases of man June 1 1948 GERALD ANGLIN
LIFESAVER IN A LAB COAT
Dr. Best of the Banting-Best insulin team today leads a crack squad of fighters against the diseases of man
GERALD ANGLIN
SOME time after World War II had ended and the last Allied general had made his triumphal tour of liberated Europe, a civilian from Canada was ushered about Britain and the continent to a welcome no less heartfelt if somewhat less tumultuous than that accorded the high brass.
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Before southern Nigerians pounce with glee, on this evidence of northern economic dependency on the south, one must pause and reflect that amalgamation was a British decision, not a northern one. Northern Nigeria had no more say in amalgamation than Southern Nigeria did (and probably, if given a choice, would have objected to it). One of the north’s leaders did, after all, later refer to amalgamation as ‘the mistake of 1914’.
‘Effect an alliance with a Southern lady of means’
The economic disparity between the two Nigerias made their amalgamation inevitable. In a light-hearted after-dinner speech to the Colonial Service Club in 1913, the secretary of state for the colonies, Lord Lewis Harcourt, used a metaphor to the impending amalgamation: “We have released Northern Nigeria from the leading strings (British) Treasury. The promising and well-conducted youth allowance ‘on his own’ and is about to effect an alliance Southern lady of means. I have issued the special li