The March: Coming Together to Conquer Cancer
Why come to Washington, DC? Because this is America. Because historically when Americans have had enough—enough segregation, enough oppression, enough injustice—they’ve come to Washington, DC. They come to testify, to bear witness, to stand vigil, to protest, to raise their voices, to let their lawmakers know what is unacceptable to them and to say, ‘NO MORE.
Ellen L. Stovall
- A Biography of the Cancer Survivorship Movement: The March
By Judith L. Pearson | March 11, 2021
An excerpt from Judith L. Pearson’s new book, From Shadows to Life: A Biography of the Cancer Survivorship Movement, follows:
On February 23, 1997, Ellen Stovall, CEO of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (NCCS), sent an email to Betsy Clark, Oncology Social Worker and president of the NCCS board of Directors. “I’ve been taking the pulse of a few key people in the cancer community,” Ellen wrote, “and trying to figure out the best way to reach people to disseminate our materials AND raise consciousness of the public at large about survivorship and NCCS. I believe I have found the answer to the latter and it’s a biggie! We need to talk.”
Ellen’s idea was a march on Washington, with General Norman Schwarzkopf in fatigues leading an army of survivors, advocates, members of the oncology community, and more. Together, they would wage a new war on cancer. NCCS would also bring other advocacy organizations whose stakeholders would participate. The country and the world would see a sea of humanity, all connected to cancer survivors. And their collective voice would ring loud in the ears of Congress, the men and women responsible for doling out cancer research funding. After all, Ellen told Betsy, if Louis Farrakhan could get a Million Man March, what’s the big deal?
Others around the country were also acutely aware of the way Nixon’s war—and attention to cancer—had stagnated. Unbeknownst to Ellen or Betsy, those folks were percolating on some kind of a big splash as well. One of them was prostate cancer survivor Michael Milken, the financier who had founded CaP CURE, the Association for the Cure of Cancer of the Prostate, a disease he had survived. Two years earlier, he had participated in the NCCS Congress. Ellen saw him on April 6, 1997, and mentioned the march idea to him. She and Betsy had taken the idea to the NCCS board, too, and they all agreed to work on feasibility details behind the scenes, but not to make any announcement till their proverbial ducks were lined up. And then fate intervened.
On April 7, 1997, Dr. Klausner was unable to take part in a cancer panel to air on Larry King Live. Ellen was asked to step in, with the rest of the panel being made up of actor Robert Urich (a synovial sarcoma survivor who connected remotely from Los Angeles), ABC news anchor Sam Donaldson (a melanoma survivor), talk-show host Morton Downey Jr. (a lung cancer survivor), television journalist Paula Zahn (who’d had four family members diagnosed with cancer a decade earlier) and Milken.
The program began innocently, with Ellen, Milken, and Donaldson lamenting the meager cancer research dollars and the fragmentation of its organizations. During the commercial, Donaldson declared, “We need a march!”
“Ellen’s in charge of marches,” Milken said, in an offhanded way. The concept spread like wildfire around the studio and by the time they were back on the air, King proclaimed in his booming voice, “We have an announcement!”
Ellen was a deer caught in headlights. This was just, as yet, an idea. No strategic planning had been done.
Read the full excerpt and view photos from The March here.
Recent contributions
- Video: Megha Ramaswamy: Increasing cervical cancer screening rates for women in jail
By The University of Kansas Cancer Center | March 10, 2021 - Albert Owens and Martin Abeloff reflect on cancer, February 1989
By Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center | March 10, 2021 - For educators: Jim Allison: Breakthrough–Educator Toolkit
By Jim Allison: Breakthrough | March 10, 2021
NCI Oral History Project
All NCI Oral History Project articles are collected here.
- NCI Oral History Project Interview with Vincent T. DeVita, Jr., M.D
By NCI | March 11, 2021 - National Cancer Institute Interview with Paul Marks, M.D.
By NCI | March 11, 2021 - NCI Oral History Project interview with J. Palmer Saunders, M.D.
By NCI | March 11, 2021 - NIH Oral History Project Interview with Norman Anderson, M.D.
By NCI | March 10, 2021 - NCI Oral History Project interview with C. Gordon Zubrod, M.D.
By NCI | March 10, 2021 - NCI Oral History Project interview with Calvin B. Baldwin, Jr.
By NCI | March 10, 2021
Oncology Nursing Society 40th Anniversary
The Oncology Nursing Society was established in 1975. These primary sources are from the 40th anniversary of ONS in 2015.
- Supporting One Another for 40 Years
By ONS | March 11, 2021 - 40 Years and Counting
By ONS | March 11, 2021 - Roles Played by Advanced Practitioners in Oncology: Present Status and Future Outlook
By ONS | March 10, 2021 - Success Is Not Final: Onward to the Future of Evidence-Based Practice
By ONS | March 10, 2021 - Celebrating ONS’s 40th Anniversary and Its Commitment to Cultural Competency, Diversity, and Inclusiveness
By ONS | March 8, 2021
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