UFHC 58 Page 21 S: Actually, I don't know. I could find that out because I'm in touch with her, but that would be nice to know. One thing that people have said about him, I guess first of all that he was really a good diagnostician although he wasn't practicing while he was here, but I guess he was very observant. P: Oh, very. I told you how he watched the trees, my goodness. He knew everything about each tree that was planted out his window. I read that in his research on Rocky Mountain spotted fever and you could tell there how good he was with that in diagnosing. That's true, I would agree with that. S: I talked to someone who wasn't his patient, but had been having problems and he'd just basically say, look at her and tell her what her problem was. P: Yeah, very observant. S: You read his Rocky Mountain spotted fever work. P: Just one article and only because my mother's beautician's son-in-law was diagnosed with Rocky Mountain spotted fever and my mother was telling me about it, and I said wow, Dr. Harrell did that research and we still had some of his papers here in our files. I picked some out that I though she, that the lay person could read. That's all that I did with that. S: He wasn't necessarily sending manuscripts to you? P: No. S: Your contact with him was more telephone conversation? P: Yes, more personal, just to see how he was or if he needed something that we might have in the files, some correspondence from the yeas past. He would call here for that. But basically I would just call just to see how he was, that's all. S: You said that they didn't do a lot of entertaining in the home. Was his wife active in the medical school. P: No, she was not. S: What was she doing? Did she have a profession? P: No, she did not. She was a dancer at one time. She was very musically inclined, but when she was here, we didn't really see her. She stayed at home. That was that.