THE WANDERING PROFESSOR WHO
CARRIES A LAB IN HER SUITCASE
A Strange Science Exclusive!
From Strange
Science Monthly, April 1938
The every-changing science of chemistry has mystified man he
first discovered fire. The ancient
Vedics and Greeks saw the universe as being made up of just five elements:
earth, water, air, fire and sometimes ether.
By the Middle Ages, alchemists had isolated 13 mineral elements and tried
in vain to transmute one into another well before the Renaissance brought us
the knowledge of our air being a mixture of elemental gases. In 1869 the Russian D. I. Mendeleev gave us
the first modern Periodic Table listing 63 chemical elements, and just last
year the Italians Perier and Segrè raised that number to 89 with their synthesis
of technetium. Indeed, something akin to
alchemy is alive and well, even in our modern 20th century. But dabble in alchemy—or anything other than “established”
science—and you’ll be hard-pressed to find a job.
That’s been the challenge for “wandering professor” Sonia
Doré. “There are other approaches to
understanding these universal building blocks,” says this woman who holds a PhD
in chemistry from New York University.
“We look at the periodic table with all of its colored squares as a way
of grasping how the smallest of particles relate to each other. It’s a useful tool, but only one of many for
unlocking the secrets of the world.”
Doré’s lab work began in the southern college circuit, but that
was only part of her training. As a chemist
by day, Doré spent her nights with doing field work professed healers—jujus and
hoodoos, modern-day alchemists working in Harlem and New Orleans, Cuba and
Haiti. Combining her academic
acredidation with these other understandings of chemistry—many as ancient as
the Greek lore handed down to western men— Professor Doré is taking science to
where few men (or women) have taken it before—in more ways than on. Traveling by train with a portable
laboratory, small enough to fit into a suitcase, she collects her atomic wherever
she can find them: sticks of chalk, roots rich in mineral content, and ordinary
sand are some favorite staples that she uses for experiments, as well as
reading dreams, healing psyches, and chasing out evil spirits.
Professor Doré often adds to her lectures by accompanying herself on the autoharp. |
With her presentation that’s part lecture, part séance,
Professor Doré never turns down an invitation to speak. Roaming from town to town, she’s visited
veteran’s hospitals, sanitariums, horse doctors, events hosted by the Rotary
Club and the American Theosophical Society, and even some churches.
“The university will teach you so much,” says Professor Doré,
“but only so much. And they aren’t yet ready for a woman like me
to literally come and stir things up.”
Professor
Doré’s Traveling Lecture and Séance will be passing though the Midwest this
spring, then over to California for the Summer before making its way back east
this fall. For an updated itinerary of
Professor Doré’s engagements, please send a self-addressed envelope to the
address given at the front of this magazine.
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