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Cancer Answers is hosted by Dr. Anees Chagpar, Associate Professor of Surgical Oncology and Director of The Breast Center at Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale-New Haven Hospital, and Dr. Francine Foss, Professor of Medical Oncology. The show features a guest cancer specialist who will share the most recent advances in cancer therapy and respond to listeners questions. Myths, facts and advances in cancer diagnosis and treatment are discussed, with a different focus eachweek. Nationally acclaimed specialists in various types of cancer research, diagnosis, and treatment discuss common misconceptions about the disease and respond to questions from the community.Listeners can submit questions to be answered on the program at canceranswers@yale.edu or by leaving a message at (888) 234-4YCC. As a resource, archived programs from 2006 through the present are available in both audio and written versions on the Yale Cancer Center website.

Numbers Jump At Yale's Campaign School For Women

Students at the Women's Campaign School at Yale
Women's Campaign School
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Students at the Women's Campaign School at Yale

“2017 is the year of the woman,” says Patricia Russo. Russo is the executive director of the Women’s Campaign School at Yale University, a program that trains women who want to run for public office. It’s been in existence for over twenty years, but Russo says this year is different. There is an unprecedented level of interest in the training sessions.

On March 31, Russo was one of the speakers at the Women’s Leadership Conference at the University of New Haven. The conference, in its third year, brings women, and a few men, together around a theme – with the hope that young women can make connections and find role models. This year’s theme was Women, Media and the Gender Lens.

Russo sprang to the stage early in the day to her theme song, “This Girl is on Fire.” She encouraged attendees to get out of their comfort zones and step up in new ways. Russo, who handled a heavy speaking schedule in the month of March, is impressed by the activism she sees in the women she has met with recently. “I have seen since the global women’s march in January this incredible uprising of activism among women of all ages, more than ever before in my thirty-plus years of being active in the women’s movement.”

Russo says the Women’s Campaign School had six hundred emails after the women’s march. “The day after the march, the phones at the Women’s Campaign School were flooded like never before. Women called us and said, ‘Hi, I marched, I’m mad, I want to run for office, and when is your next session?’”

The Campaign School maintains a non-partisan curriculum, and several of their graduates sit across the aisle from each other in state legislatures. But all the attendees are looking for practical ways to influence the political process. Usually about one hundred women have applied for the training program at this time of year. Right now they have five hundred. Russo says they’re thinking of adding more training to meet the need.

A panel discussion at the Women’s Leadership Conference ranged across topics such as how women are portrayed in the media, battles for respect in the workplace, and the need for women to support each other in public life. One message that came through from the panelists was the need to get tough and to speak up. Russo might argue that it’s already happening. 

Copyright 2017 WSHU

Alison Freeland

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