Sunday, February 12, 2006

February 11, 2006

Explorations Speaker Dr. Mae Jemison

Mae C. Jemison blasted into orbit aboard the space shuttle Endeavour, September 12, 1992 – the first woman of color to go into space. Now, founder and president of two technology companies, the space flight was just one of a series of accomplishments for this dynamic woman. Born in Decatur, Alabama and raised in Chicago, she entered Stanford University as a scholarship student at age 16. After graduating with a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and an A.B. in African and Afro-American Studies, she earned her doctorate in medicine at Cornell University Medical College.
Prior to her six years as an astronaut (1987-1993), Dr. Jemison served two and a half years as the Area Peace Corps Medical Officer for Sierra Leone and Liberia and practiced medicine in Los Angeles. After NASA, she founded the technology consulting firm, The Jemison Group, Inc., to consider socio-cultural impacts when designing technologies. As an environmental studies professor at Dartmouth College, she taught courses on sustainable development and technology design. Her latest business venture, BioSentient Corporation, focuses on physiological monitoring to improve health and human performance. A strong, committed voice for science literacy, in 1994 Jemison founded the international science camp The Earth We Share™ for students 12-16 years old. In her book Find Where the Wind Goes, she writes for teenagers about growing up on the south side of Chicago, cultivating her aspiration to be a scientist and professional dancer, her experiences as a medical student in Africa, and her history-making journey into space. An A.D. White Professor-at-Large at Cornell University and a member of several Fortune 500 corporate boards, Jemison is a member of the Institute of Medicine, an inductee of National Women’s Hall of Fame and the National Medical Association Hall of Fame, and winner of the Kilby Science Award. In 1993 she was chosen one of People Magazine’s “World’s 50 Most Beautiful People” and in 1999 she was selected as one of the top seven women leaders most likely to become President of the United States.

from the navigator

After departing Cumberland Bay and Grytviken, we proceeded on a northeasterly course in the South Atlantic Ocean on our way to Tristan da Cunha. Both the ocean currents and the prevailing wind-system in this ocean region, and at this time of the year, are favorable for us and are with us in the same direction as our course-line.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home