Carolyn M. Baum Oral History, 2010
- OH129
- Collection
- 2010-04-09
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
Baum, M. Carolyn
157 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
Carolyn M. Baum Oral History, 2010
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
Baum, M. Carolyn
Carolyn M. Baum Oral History, 2016
Oral history with Carolyn M. Baum conducted by Al Wiman, April 26, 2016.
Charles W. McLaughlin, Jr. Oral History
McLaughlin discusses completing his medical degree at Washington University School of Medicine and his internship and residency experiences. McLaughlin recounts his service as a surgeon during the Second World War in the U.S. Naval Reserves. He also discusses the role of the American College of Surgeons, his many medical publications on breast and other cancers, and trends in medicine. Interviewed by Darryl Podoll on May 4, 1979. OH040. Approximate Length 61 minutes.
McLaughlin, Charles W., Jr.
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
Caldwell, Cheryl Ann
Interviewed by Margaret Cowdry Haun in 1984. Both recording and transcript are missing.
Sams discusses his decision to pursue a medical degree at the Washington University School of Medicine, his interest in neurosurgery, and the influence of faculty member Ernest Sachs. He describes his research on heat syndrome while assigned to the Panama Canal Department and talks extensively about his work during the Second World War in the Middle East, Europe, and the Far East in preparing medical services for casualties. At the end of the Second World War Sams was made Chief of the Public Health and Welfare Section of the General Headquarters, Supreme Command Allied Powers and was responsible for the establishment of all activities pertaining to the health and welfare of the Japanese. Sams relates his contributions in the rebuilding Japan, including studying the effects of radiation after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, establishing mass immunization programs, improving medical care and education, and nutrition initiatives during this period. He also describes similar work he performed in Korea before, during and after the Korean War. Sams then discusses his research on low-level radiation at the Operations Research Center at the University of California-Berkeley, as well as the early efforts in the application of computer systems to biological research. The audio quality of the interview is inconsistent and at times very poor. There are several instances of unintelligible words or sentences. Interviewed by Darryl Podoll on May 3, 1979. OH037. Approximate Length 112 minutes.
Sams, Crawford F.
D. LaVonne Jaeger Oral History
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM. Approximate Length: 39 minutes.
Jaeger, D. LaVonne
Daniel Nathans Oral History (OH038)
Nathans participated in two oral histories. In the first interview, Nathans discusses his childhood in Wilmington, Delaware, his undergraduate education at the University of Delaware, and his experiences in medical school at the Washington University School of Medicine. Nathans recalls some of men who influenced his career, including Barry Wood, Carl Cori, Oliver Lowry, Robert Loeb, Fritz Lipmann, and colleagues such as Hamilton O. Smith and Norton Zinder. He recalls his internship and residency at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York, and his experiences as a researcher at the National Institutes of Health, Rockefeller University and the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.
In the first interview, Nathans describes some of his research in microbiology, the biosynthesis of proteins, restriction enzymes, RNA phages, and molecular genetics. In the second interview, Nathans discusses the potential significance of his research on recombinant DNA and the effect of winning the Nobel Prize on his personal life and career.
The audio quality of the interviews is inconsistent. Some portions are inaudible. The first interview lasts approximately 56 minutes; the second interview follows immediately and lasts approximately 48 minutes. There is background noise during the second interview. Interviewed by Dr. Sondra Schlesinger (first interview) and Dorothy A. Brockoff (second interview); introduction by Darryl Podoll on May 4, 1979. The oral history number is OH038. Approximate Length is 104 minutes.
Nathans, Daniel
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
Kennell recounts the participation of the St. Louis Doctors for Peace in the nationwide Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam held on October 15, 1969 at the Washington University School of Medicine. The audio quality of the last 40 seconds of the interview is poor. Interviewed by Walter W. Walker on November 25, 1969. OH005. Approximate Length 18 minutes.
Kennell, David E.
David Goldring Oral History (OH101)
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 19 minutes.
See (PC054) Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records: David Goldring Oral History for the contents of the oral history collection.
Goldring, David
Interviewed by Paul Anderson in 2006. Interviewed in three parts (09/27/2006; 10/04/2006; 10/18/2006).
Kipnis, David M.
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
McDonnell, Debbie
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM.
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger, Director of the Program in Physical Therapy, WUSM.
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM. Approximate Length: 16 minutes.
Vickery, Donna
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM. Approximate Length: 50 minutes.
Brydon, Doris Ann
Dorothy Devendorf Thomas Oral History
Interview conducted by Susan Deusinger of the Physical Therapy Department, WUSM. Approximate Length: 37 minutes.
Thomas, Dorothy Devendorf
E. V. Cowdry Oral History (OH002)
Interviewed by Walter W. Walker in 1969. Approximate Length: 90 minutes.
Cowdry, E. V. (Edmund Vincent)
E. V. Cowdry Oral History (OH008)
In the first interview Cowdry describes his early days at the Peking Union Medical College, established by the Rockefeller Foundation in China, from 1917 to 1921. He describes the state of medical education and practice of medicine in China at that time. The second interview concerns the 15th Japan Medical Congress in March-April, 1959 and the work of Dr. H. Marvin Pollard and his survey of Japanese teaching hospitals.
Interviewed by Walter W. Walker in 1969. Approximate Length: 90 minutes.
Cowdry, E. V. (Edmund Vincent)