Women in STEM

Mona Hanna-Attisha

Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha was one of the key individuals to expose lead poisoning in Flint, Michigan and bring attention to the contamination in the water supply.

Image: Wikimedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

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Anna Atkins

In 1843, photographer and botanist Anna Atkins became the first person to publish a book illustrated with photographs.

Image: Wikipedia.

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Chung-Pei Ma

Dr. Chung-Pei Ma has helped discover two of the largest black holes found to date and is also a classical violinist that played with the Youth Symphony in Taiwan at age 8 and still enjoys playing as a hobby.

Image Courtesy of UC Berkeley.

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Antonia Novello

Dr. Antonia Novello was appointed Surgeon General of the United States in 1990, becoming the first woman and first Hispanic to serve in that role.

Image: Wikimedia.

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Virginia Holsinger

A food scientist with a positive worldwide public health impact, Dr. Virginia Holsinger‘s work on food security issues and dairy product research impacted many lives throughout her 41 year career at the United States Department of Agriculture.

Image: USDA.

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Barbara Liskov

The recipient of the 2008 Turing Award, Dr. Barbara Liskov is an Institute Professor and member of the Programming Methodology group at MIT.

Image: Kenneth C. Zirkel (CC BY-SA 3.0).

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Isabel Morgan

Isabel Morgan’s work was a critical step in the journey toward a killed-virus polio vaccine.

Image: Wikimedia.

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Ila Fox Loetscher

Today we want to tell you about aviator turned conservationist Ila Fox Loetscher.

Image Courtesy of Sea Turtle Inc.

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Margaret Reed Lewis

Margaret Reed Lewis earned her bachelor’s degree in biology from Goucher College in 1901 and spent the next few years studying for a graduate degree. She never quite achieved that goal but made great strides in our understanding of cells and tissues during her lifetime.

Image: Smithsonian Institution Archives.

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Erna Schneider Hoover

Dr. Erna Hoover has been quoted as saying that, “when I was hired the glass ceiling was somewhere between the basement and the sub-basement.” But that didn’t stop her from developing a program that would change the way telephone systems operated and being awarded one of the first patents for computer software.

Image Courtesy of the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

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