Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gertrude Shapiro, 1952–1971, New Hampshire School of Accounting and Secretarial Science, then renamed New Hampshire College (now Southern New Hampshire University) [7] Dora E. Kirby, 1959–1977, Woodbury University; Sr. Doris Smith, S.C., 1972–1992, College of Mount Saint Vincent; Lorene Rogers, 1974–1979, The University of Texas at ...
Roberta Cooper Ramo was the first female President of the American Bar Association. [221] 1996 Alice Rivlin became the first woman to serve as Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve. [176] 1997 Madeleine Albright, born in Prague, became the first woman to serve as Secretary of State; she served under President Bill Clinton. [222] [4]
1953 photograph of Lois Graham in Popular Science. In 1949, Graham became the first female faculty member in IIT's engineering department, and the first female graduate student accepted into its Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering program. IIT had to make an adjustment upon her arrival: converting a small closet into a ladies restroom.
Science; Science, technology, engineering and mathematics; ... First woman president of Wilson College: ... The first female president in Southeast Asia.
Sherita T. Ceasar, Vice President Product Engineering Planning and Strategy, Comcast Communications [27] Dr. Thelma Estrin (1924–2014), computer scientist and engineer who pioneered work in expert systems and biomedical engineering. She was one of the first to apply computer technology to healthcare and medical research
Audrey F. Manley, graduate of Spelman College; its president, 1997–2002; Susan Tolman Mills, graduate of Mount Holyoke College; co-founder and first president of Mills College; Carol Ann Mooney, graduate of Saint Mary's College; president 2004–2016; Nancy J. Vickers, graduate of Mount Holyoke College; president of Bryn Mawr College, 1997–2008
Claudine Gay, president of Harvard University, during a House Education and the Workforce Committee hearing in Washington, D.C on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2023.
Dianne Dorland is an American chemical engineer and STEM education advocate. She served as the first female president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. [1] She is also the former chair of the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Minnesota Duluth and the former dean of the Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering at Rowan University.