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| Profiles/Laura Noll and Jane Protzman, Wheaton Class of 1959 | |||||||
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Introduction |
I had the chance to speak with Laura Noll and Jane Protzman, both of the Wheaton College Class of 1959, when they returned to campus in May 2004 for their 45th class reunion. In 1959, they both graduated with Mathematics degrees and were immediately recruited by Bell Labs. Noll is still employed by AT&T; Protzman retired from AT&T in 1989. The recollections they shared with me painted a fascinating picture of the experiences of women of their era. I was originally surprised to hear that they had been actively recruited as programmers right out of college. This was not unusual, they assured me. Bell Labs was purposefully recruiting women with mathematics degrees at this time. The women they hired were given the title of Senior Technical Aide, and were essentially entry-level programmers. They were recruiting men, too, of course; however, all of the men they hired out of college were sent first to a year of graduate school, and then started work as a Member of Technical Staff. Noll remarked, "When they interviewed us and hired us, they didn't necessarily say, 'We're interviewing you and hiring you for this level of job, and if you were a guy you'd be interviewed and hired for this other level of job.' That wasn't discussed." Nonetheless, that was the situation at the time and for many years after that. There were occasionally a few men in the Senior Technical Aide position, but unlike the women (who all had mathematics degrees), they were typically men who had received some training in the military and did not hold any degrees. Shockingly, one woman in Noll's group had a Ph.D., and yet still did not hold an advanced position. When she went out on maternity leave, she insisted that a condition of her return would be that she would be granted a Member of Technical Staff title like the men. The need to fight that strongly for advancement sometimes intimidated Noll; "She was a very strong person," she recalls. "I remember from time to time having conflicting thoughts of: Did I want to do what she did to get ahead, or not? Because it wasn't necessarily my personality."
The different situations of men and women were not the only major contrast between their experiences and those of their contemporary counterparts. While women in Computer Science courses today learn about writing functions in their first semester as a primary part of program design, Protzman recalled how Fortran originally did not have any such constructs, which complicated their work on a large-scale program. "We didn't have subroutines, and it wouldn't compile; the computer wasn't big enough! And then one day the boss came in and said, 'We have Fortran 2, with subroutines!'" With that revolutionary change in the language, the programmers were able to restructure the entire program they were working on. Another aspect of the past that Protzman remembers with amusement is how programs were run. Whereas today's Computer Scientist may complain about how long something takes to compile, it is not comparable to when Protzman would have to take a box of punch cards, drive it 20 minutes to where it could be fed into the computer, sit in a lounge waiting for the program to run, and then drive 20 minutes back to the office. With that kind of time invested in a single run, "you didn't make mistakes - or you tried not to," she said.
Speaking of young women who back away from involvement with computers because they are afraid of peer judgment, Protzman said, "They don't have their identities; our identities were established when we started." The solution? Both women urge their younger counterparts to have the confidence in themselves to pursue what they are interested in, regardless of what others may think or say; excellent and timeless advice from those who have walked the path to those still considering it. |
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