Hurrah—it’s Ada Lovelace Day! You know—the one day of the year that we consider
ourselves all diverse and inclusive to recall the contributions made to the
fields of science, technology, engineering and math by women.
In years past, I’ve written about such
brilliant minds as Grace
Hopper (whose celebration I attended just last week); Nobel Laureate (for
physiology/medicine) Rosalyn
Sussman; Hedy
Lamarr (who developed the radio frequency hopping system that underpins
mobile telephony); research chemist Marie
M. Daly; IDEO designer Barbara
Beskind; and Joan
Struthers Curran and Beatrice
Shilling, engineers whose work contributed to our victory in the Second
World War.
If you’ve ever used caller ID to screen phone
calls (before the telemarketers and IRS scam artists learned to spoof their
numbers), you can thank today’s entry. Shirley Ann Jackson, a DC native, was the
first African-American to be granted a doctorate from MIT; it was in nuclear
physics, and the year was 1973.
Jackson’s career spanned serious bench research
at prestigious labs in the United States and Europe, including AT&T Bell
Laboratories, where her discoveries contributed to advances in semiconductors, and to the development of touch-tone telephony, caller ID/call waiting, fiber optics and solar cells.
President Bill Clinton appointed her the Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, where she assisted in the establishment of the
International Nuclear Regulators Association.
Since July of 1999, Jackson has served as
president of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York. I kind of wish
she’d stayed at the bench and come up with a way to shut out all the
telemarketers and scammers, but I suppose that’s too much to hope from even as
remarkable a woman as Jackson.
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