375 Millennium - A Marquis Who’s Who Magazine SCIENCES, PHARMACEUTICALS AND BIOTECHNOLOGY materials science. She received the Presidential Award from the Electron Microscopy Society of America as a Graduate Student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Moreover, she was afforded the opportunity to be invited to speak before the American Ceramic Society, through which she discussed her elaborate studies on titanium diboride. Emphasizing that she is a self-motivated individual, Dr. Vanderwalker was mentored extensively by various faculty members at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Oxford University. She was influenced by these staff members to apply her best efforts to all her research studies, and she often emulated their techniques and legacies in her own research. She advises emerging professionals in the field to follow their dreams and never forfeit in the face of struggle. As a testament to her success, Dr. Vanderwalker has been selected for inclusion in Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in Science and Engineering, Who’s Who in the East, Who’s Who in the World and Who’s Who of American Women. States Army Materials Technology Laboratory (later the Army Research Laboratory) in Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1986. Serving as a materials research engineer for eight years, she ultimately retired from her profession in 1994. During her tenure at the Army Research Laboratory, Dr. Vanderwalker published papers, articles and abstracts, including the paper “Hydride Formation on Dislocations in Titanium” through Springer Publishing in March 1989 and the paper “Fracture in Titanium Diboride” in January 1989. Previously, she penned “Atomistic Aspects: The Influence of Cu on Dislocation Motion in Si” in March 1984 and “The Dependence of Li Phase Nucleation on the Structure of Partial Dislocations in Silicon” in August 1985. Over the course of her career, Dr. Vanderwalker has contributed more than 13 published papers and articles to scientific journals. She notes that her published writing has been the ultimate highlight of her career. A member of the New York Academy of Sciences, Dr. Vanderwalker has been recognized extensively for her contributions to the field of
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