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Cornell University's Medical College got a new full professor last week. To Dr. Elise Strang L'Esperance, clinical professor of preventive medicine, the recognition came at an age when most professors are tacking emeritus on to their titles. The new rank would mean little change in the duties she has filled with bustling enthusiasm as assistant professor for six years. But it did mark the last hurdle cleared on the long obstacle course which an ardently feminist doctor had been following for more than half a century. Says she: "I've been living medicine...
Father's Hope. Second daughter of a New York doctor who wanted a son to follow his profession, Elise Strang heard her father say of her: "This one will be my doctor." Dr. Strang died long before his daughter was ready for college, but she kept his fondest hope in mind. In 1896, at 16, she entered the Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary for Women & Children...
...York Infirmary, on the East Side, housed the first Kate Depew Strang Cancer Prevention Clinic. In its first year (1937), 71 women, apparently in good health, went there. Three had cancer. Dr. L'Esperance made most of the detailed, complicated examinations herself. As popular response doubled each year, a second clinic was opened in 1940 at Memorial Center for Cancer and Allied Diseases. This clinic was later opened to men and children. Now, under Dr. L'Esperance's direction, 84 nurses, technicians and doctors (most of the doctors are part-time) do the work...
...fondly refers to a friend or an associate as "old buzzard." Exacting to a fault, Dr. L'Esperance sees things beginning to go her way. Since 1946, juniors from Cornell's Department of Preventive Medicine have had to take a session at the Memorial's Strang Cancer Prevention Clinic. This summer, the clinic at Memorial will get its first internes. Doctors who get this training, Dr. L'Esperance hopefully believes, may yet be able to prevent many a cancer by catching its first warning signals...
Five girls passed the tests and will be cast as soon as Project 109's script is returned in final form. Virginia Carroll '51, Judy Jaeger '53, Marie Beth Walch '53, Ann Strang '53, and Nancy Cussack of Lasell Junior College will compete for the major female role, "the heartless girl friend...