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Joycelyn Elders, M.D. : From Sharecropper’s Daughter To Surgeon General Of The United States Of America

  • Joycelyn Elders, M.D. : From Sharecropper's Daughter To  Surgeon General Of The United States Of America
  • Attribution

    Joycelyn Elders and David Chanoff
  • Publication Details

    Book, 1st ed, Morrow, 1996
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
     (UPPER LEVEL)  R154.E48 A3 1996  AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    Few figures on the contemporary American political landscape have been as visible and memorable, as admired and hated, as Dr. Joycelyn Elders. Now, in Joycelyn Elders, M.D.: From Sharecropper’s Daughter to Surgeon General of the United States of America she shares the story of her extraordinary life, the roots of her values and the evolution of her ideas and reveals the behind-the-scenes machinations that led to her firing from the office of Surgeon General. This plainspoken and utterly candid autobiography takes readers through Elders’ poverty stricken childhood in the tiny town of Schaal, Arkansas where Elders (called Minnie Lee Jones in those days) grew up in a tiny cabin with neither electricity, nor running water. Elders’ inspiring public life is matched with a moving private story about which she is forthright in Joycelyn Elders, M.D. Still, never afraid of a good fight, Elders did manage to do some good work during that intensely painful period negotiating for and winning additional responsibilities for the office and consolidating more real power in the position then it ever before had. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
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  • Notes

    • Includes index
    • The oldest of eight children, Joycelyn Elders was born Minnie Lee Jones in the tiny town of Schaal, Arkansas, in 1933. She grew up in a three-room cabin and, at age fifteen, graduated from high school as valedictorian. When she entered Philander Smith College in Little Rock, she had never seen a doctor, let alone dreamed of becoming one. Dr. Elders graduated from the University of Arkansas Medical School and then became its first black resident, its first black chief resident, and finally its first black professor. By the time of the Senate debate on her confirmation as surgeon general in August 1993, Dr. Elders had been a respected pediatric endocrinologist and medical scientist for a quarter of a century, as well as the director of Arkansas’s health department under then- governor Clinton. But during Dr. Elders’s tenure as surgeon general she came under fire for her controversial positions on such subjects as abortion, sex education, the distribution of condoms, and the legalization of drugs. Her passion and outspokenness enraged Republicans and often upset the Clinton administration. Now, Dr. Elders openly describes the top-level machinations that led the Clinton health insurance reform to self-destruct and eventually resulted in her own dismissal. She writes with equal candor about such intimate personal tragedies as her youngest son’s drug addiction and arrest, and about the poisoned political climate in Arkansas, which has affected the lives of so many of the President’s friends and appointees
  • ISBN

    • 0688147224
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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