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Archival description
Series
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The Singing Doctors Records

This series contains records relating to Dr. Brown’s involvement with a medical parody music group, the Singing Doctors. Records include two LP records produced by the Singing Doctors, photographs, and collected publications about the group.

Digital Files and Analog and Digital Storage Media, circa 1960s-1999.

This series includes digital surrogates of 35mm photographic slides and an audio recording of an interview with Dr. Bain; and digital files of an issue of a family newsletter, a video of Dr. Bain’s 100th birthday party, and eulogies for Dr. Bain.

The series is organized into two sub-series based on storage medium. Sub-series 1 contains the digital surrogates and files stored in Becker Archives’ digital archives. Sub-series 2 contains the digital surrogates and files in the original analog and digital storage media.

Video Recordings, 1961-2007, undated.

This series primarily includes video recordings in different formats of interviews with a patient who was successfully treated for Landau-Kleffner Syndrome as a child. The recordings include a diagnostic interview with the patient at six years old in October 1961, a demonstration of her progress in October 1962 after a year of therapy, and follow-up interviews with the patient and her mother in 2006.

The patient’s case is included as Patient 7 in Mantovani J.F. & Landau W.M. (1980). “Acquired Aphasia with Convulsive Disorder: Course and Prognosis.” Neurology, 30 (5), 524–529.

Correspondence and Related Materials

This series contains correspondence and related materials primarily concerning Dr. Ballinger’s positions at Johns Hopkins University and Washington University School of Medicine. Of note are letters, schedules, and notes related to his interviews for positions at both schools.

Correspondence of Willie Mae Kountz, 1967-1979.

In 1928 WBK married Willie Mae Weissinger of St. Louis. In their later married life, Mrs. Kountz was very active in raising financial support for her husband's specialty through work with women's clubs. Following WBK's death, Mrs. Kountz corresponded with several of his colleagues, the basis of this series. Most numerous are letters from Washington University Vice Chancellors for Medical Affairs, William H. Danforth, and his successor Samuel B. Guze, and the first Kountz Professor, Hugh B. Chaplin.

Kountz, Willie Mae

Artifacts, 1967-1970.

This series contains two awards given to Dr. Bain, the Grulee Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society award. Folders titles are descriptive and were assigned by the archivist.

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