What was my biggest obstacle?
Being female.
How do I make a difference?
I do not take "No" to mean I cannot do something. I take it to mean that person will not help me. Also, I try to focus on things that are personally relevant to me, but to try to help others in their issues if they request it. [From: "Interview with Florence Haseltine, Ph.D., M.D., August 8, 1977." Interview conducted by Joyce Antler, Ph.D. Oral History Project on Women in Medicine. (Philadelphia: Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1978), pp. 29, 30, 31, 40. Quoted with permission of Drexel University College of Medicine, Archives.]
Who was my mentor?
I really did not have one. I have had people who helped me at different times:
a. My mother, who told me to be good in math, because I would always get a job.
b. My father, who liked his work, so I assumed that if I went to MIT I would like mine as well. So I had a goal from the age of 5 or 6 that I would go to MIT.
c. My first husband, Fred Cahn, who said if they could do it so could I.
d. Anna Maria Torrini-Gorini, a woman at MIT who was always helpful and cheerful.
e. My second husband, Alan Chodos, who does not interfere.
f. A wonderful surgeon at my residency program, Ray Reilly, who taught me how to be a surgeon.
g. Mary Clutter, the associate director for Biological Sciences at the National Science Foundation, for telling me how the government works and who is always available.
h. Myself. I saw what I did not like in others and tried hard not to be like them. Also, when I do something that makes me feel bad, I try to avoid getting into the same spot again.
[From: "Interview with Florence Haseltine, Ph.D., M.D., August 8, 1977." Interview conducted by Joyce Antler, Ph.D. Oral History Project on Women in Medicine. (Philadelphia: Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1978), pp. 29, 30, 31, 40. Quoted with permission of Drexel University College of Medicine, Archives.]
How has my career evolved over time?
I would say there have been a batches of forks in the road and I have been lucky that I turned down interesting ones.
[From: "Interview with Florence Haseltine, Ph.D., M.D., August 8, 1977." Interview conducted by Joyce Antler, Ph.D. Oral History Project on Women in Medicine. (Philadelphia: Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1978), pp. 29, 30, 31, 40. Quoted with permission of Drexel University College of Medicine, Archives.]