- VC265-S365
- Series
- no date, 1983-1990
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
2 black and white 5x7 inch portraits and 4 black and white 8x10 inch photographs depicting Peter G. Tuteur.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
2 black and white 5x7 inch portraits and 4 black and white 8x10 inch photographs depicting Peter G. Tuteur.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
1 black and white 2x2 inch portrait and 1 black and white 8x10 inch photograph depicting Richard E. Ostlund, Jr.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
1 black and white 8x10 inch negative, 31 black and white 35mm negative film strips, 1 black and white 3.5x2.5 inch photograph, 14 black and white 3x4 inch photographs, 1 color 5x7 inch photograph, 17 black and white 5x7 inch photographs, and X black and w
John M. Fredrickson Otolaryngology Papers.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
16 color 35mm slides and 2 black and white 8x10 inch photographs depicting John Morris - Neurology.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
1 black and white 8x10 inch contact sheet and 5 black and white 8x10 inch portraits of Gary D. Paige - Otolaryngology, Anatomy and Neurobiology.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
6 black and white 5x7 inch photographs and 35 black and white 8x10 inch photographs depicting various unidentified photographs featuring pediatric care.
Kornfeld, Stuart and Rosalind.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
5 black and white 5x7 inch portraits and 7 black and white 8x10 inch portraits of Stuart Kornfeld - Hematology/Oncology.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
24 color 35mm slides, 7 black and white 5x7 inch photographs, 3 black and white 8x10 inch contact sheets, 1 black and white 8x10 inch photograph, and 4 color 3x5 inch transparencies depicting various shots of Glenn Conroy, fossils, and fossil scans.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
2 black and white 8x10 inch photographs featuring C. Everett Koop - former Surgeon General.
Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project notes
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
This series contains project notes and drafts written by Edwin McCleskey and the original interview recordings on audio cassette tapes. The contents include research notes and project planning documents; drafts of a proposal for minority scholarships; notes from a pre-interview with M. Kenton King, the former Dean of Washington University School of Medicine; and a summary of an un-taped interview with James L. Sweatt, III, the first Black graduate of Washington University School of Medicine.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
Two interviews of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990.
Herweg, John C.
William M. Landau Oral History
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 67 minutes.
As background to the desegregation of hospitals and Washington University School of Medicine, Landau discusses his experiences with segregation in St. Louis as a child, and as medical student, house officer, and resident at Barnes Hospital and the school of medicine. He mentions figures who played a role in desegregation, including David Goldring, Alexis Hartmann, Sr., and Park White, and discusses the obstruction to integration at Barnes from Frank Bradley, the director of the hospital, and the board of trustees. Landau also discusses the desegregation of the school of medicine.
Landau, William M.
Julian C. Mosley, Jr. Oral History
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 57 minutes.
Julian Mosley, the second Black student to graduate from Washington University School of Medicine, discusses his experiences as a student in the 1960s and recruitment strategies and programs for students from minority groups.
He begins by explaining why he decided to come to Washington University. He discusses the other Black students in his class and his efforts to recruit more Black students to the medical school. Mosley also discusses the work of Robert Lee as Assistant Dean for Minority Student Affairs and his success at recruiting students. He addresses specific efforts on the part of Lee, other students, and the university that supported minority students, including tutoring and individualized programs.
Mosley next discusses the Wessler Committee and later, their recommendations. He addresses the lack of Black professors at Washington University and at the medical school, and the lack of Black students in the residency programs. He also discusses the effects of the Supreme Court case Regents of the University of California v. Bakke on minority student recruitment.
He discusses his experience with integration in high school in East St. Louis, in the Air Force Academy, and at Washington University, and his experiences with professional societies and student medical associations and programs.
Lastly, Mosley explains what he believes needs to be done to recruit more Black graduate students and faculty, and gives his thoughts for the future.
Mosley, Julian C., Jr.
James M. Whittico Oral History
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 90 minutes.
Whittico, James M., Jr.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
2 black and white 2x3 inch portraits, 1 black and white 5x7 inch portrait, and 8 black and white 8x10 inch portraits of H. Mitchell Perry.
William C. Banton, II Oral History
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 67 minutes.
Banton, William C., II
Howard Phillip Venable Oral History
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 1 hour and 16 minutes.
Please note that some of Venable’s statements contain ambiguities that the interviewers were unable to verify.
Howard Phillip Venable discusses his experience at Homer G. Phillips Hospital, the desegregation of hospitals in St. Louis, his work with students, and his experience with housing discrimination.
Venable describes how he came to work at Homer G. Phillips Hospital and the segregation of medical care and medical education in St. Louis in the 1930s and 1940s. He explains the connections between Homer Phillips, Washington University, and St. Louis University, and discusses the doctors from Washington University and Barnes Hospital who came to Homer Phillips. Venable also relates his work identifying ophthalmological differences between Black and white patients.
He addresses his role in desegregating an ophthalmology society in St. Louis, the housing discrimination he faced in Creve Coeur and his case against the city, and the part he played in the desegregation of St. Louis hospitals. He relates his experience as a Black doctor before Barnes integrated, and the white patients he saw at his private practice. He also discusses the closure of Homer Phillips and the differences between Homer Phillips and Max Sarkloff Hospital (City Hospital No. 1).
Venable discusses the establishment of the Katie and Howard Phillip Venable Student Research Fund in Ophthalmology and his experience as an associate examiner for the American Board of Ophthalmology. He also explains what he thinks should be done to get more Black students into medical school.
Venable, Howard Phillip
Part of Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project Records
An interview of the Washington University Medical Center Desegregation History Project, conducted by Edwin W. McCleskey and associates, 1990. Approximate Length: 64 minutes.
Paul Saunders discusses the suit he and others filed against Barnes Hospital in 1978 for civil rights violations, as well as the state of health care policy and health care for Black people in St. Louis.
Saunders discusses the policy for “geographic separation of patients” at Barnes Hospital’s Maternity Hospital, initiated by hospital director Robert Frank in 1978, and the suit Saunders and others filed with the Missouri Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
He addresses hospital policies and procedures which create informal segregation, and the effects of white flight on medical care in St. Louis, particularly for indigent patients. He discusses the need for national health insurance, and barriers created by the current health care system for Black patients.
Saunders, Paul N.
Part of Medical Public Affairs Name and Subject Photographs, Negatives, and Slides
13 color 35mm slides featuring Cathy J. Lazarus.