When Harlem Nearly Killed King (17 page)

FOURTEEN:
subsequent fates

1.
One third of housestaffs being foreign graduates by 1960, 48% in NYC hospitals:
ibid.
, p. 194.

2.
Twenty-three Harlem Hospital housestaff failing foriegn medical exams:
ibid
., p. 196.

3.
Recommendation of affilation between Columbia and Harlem Hospital and the controversy it caused: interviews with Dr. Felton; Maynard,
Surgeons to the Poor, op. cit
., pp. 202–212.

4.
Weakness of the Department of Internal Medicine and the controversy involved: interview with Dr. Charles Felton, New York City, September 21, 2000.

epilogue

1.
King’s misstatement of facts regarding surgery:
The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.
, edited by Clayborne Carson, (Warner Books, 1998), pp. 117–120.

2.
Parker and Bochstael’s confirmation of Cordice’s accounts of surgery and Maynard: interview with Dr. John Parker, Brooklyn, NY, September 13, 2000.

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