Tag Archives: Middle East

TechWomen Delegation in Morocco – Day 1

TechWomen going to Morocco . TechWomen pencils

A group of Silicon Valley Mentors and MENA Mentees from the TechWomen program have gathered this week in Morocco to learn and teach about women in computing. A group of us flew in together from San Francisco and the others met us here. Today, we went on a short tour of Marrakech, including two women’s craft cooperatives, and then enjoyed a Fantasia dinner featuring music, dancing, and a show with horses and camels. We will be visiting schools and have WWW.TECHWOMEN.ORG MOROCCO 2011 pencils and other gifts for the children.  The TechWomen have missed each other after our intense June together in the Silicon Valley.  We are enjoying being together!

Marrakech tiled doorway Morocco . Katy Dickinson with TechWomen in Morocco
Marrakech Fantasia horses Morocco . Marrakech Fantasia camels Morocco

TechWomen in Marrakech Morocco
Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson

#WIT11

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85th Birthday Book

Thank You Steve Jobs Sign 6 Oct 2011

1929 Wade Dickinson . 1931 Eleanor

My father’s 85th birthday is at the end of this month.  I wanted to create his lifetime picture book and send it to the printer before I go to Morocco for a week with the TechWomen delegation of mentors and mentees.  I have been working on the book on and off for a month. I am very much looking forward to that trip to North Africa but glad I will be back in time for my father’s birthday party.

My husband and I just watched How to live before you die, the 2005 commencement speech at Stanford University by Steve Jobs. Last night, I finished putting together my book and sent it off to be printed.  On this sad day of Jobs’ death, when we mourn and pay tribute to one of the great creative technical leaders of the Silicon Valley, I take special pleasure in using the remarkable tools that Jobs brought into being.  The birthday book was created using Apple iPhoto on a MacBook Pro laptop computer with pictures from a variety of family sources, particularly the collections I put together for my father’s 80th birthday in 2006 and my mother’s 80th birthday earlier this year.  The Apple Store is printing my book.  Like Steve Jobs, my father is a technical innovator. Here is the book’s introduction:

Ben Wade Oakes Dickinson III was born in 1926 in Hickory Township, Pennsylvania, to Ben Wade Orr Dickinson, Junior, and Gladys Grace Oakes Dickinson. His one sibling, Robert Wayne was born eight years later. Wade and Wayne have been lifelong partners, starting over 25 companies together and being granted over 35 patents for a broad variety of technical inventions.

Wade attended Carnegie Institute of Technology, then West Point (the United States Military Academy) starting at the end of World War II and graduating in 1949. He worked on the United States Air Force Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program, was graduated from the Oak Ridge School of Reactor Technology, and was a researcher at RAND Corporation. Wade left the military to join Bechtel Corporation, then served as Technical Advisor on Atomic Energy to the US Congress. Wade and Wayne taught the class “Venture Design: The Start Up Company” (Engineering-110) for the University of California at Berkeley for over 15 years.

Wade married Eleanor Evelyn Vaughan Creekmore in 1952 with whom he had three children: Mark, Katy, and Peter. He has six grandchildren: Jessica and Paul, Corey and Forrest, Lynda and Daniel.

Even though I was able to fit hundreds of pictures of my father and our family into the 90 page custom book, there were many left over. Some of the pictures with this blog entry made it into the book but others did not.  I hope the printed book will get here before I go to Morocco.

1949 USMA Wade . 1948 Eleanor
1972 Wade . 1975 Eleanor
Wade 2011 . Eleanor and Latte 2011

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Mentors’ Party

TechWomen Mentors

The TechWomen mentors from the Silicon Valley are keeping in good communication with their mentees in the Middle East and North Africa. We have seen about a dozen new projects, including non-profits and business start-ups, initiated so far by our 37 talented and energetic colleagues since they returned to MENA from working with us here in California. Many of the mentors continue to serve as individual and group advisors, despite being half a world away.

One of the last official phases of the 2011 U.S. State Department’s mentoring program will happen next month when a few of us go to visit the technical women in Morocco for a week. We had hoped to go to Lebanon as well but regrettably that trip had to be cancelled.  Six of the mentees have recently won scholarships to return to the USA for a week to attend the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, to be held 9-12 November 2011 in Portland, Oregon.  We look forward to seeing them there!

Yesterday in the hot autumn afternoon, 17 of the technical and cultural mentors met at my house in Willow Glen (San Jose, CA) for a potluck dinner, to catch up and enjoy each others’ company. Mentors from Huawei, Intel, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Likelist, NetApp, Northgate Environmental Management, SF Public Press, and Symantec and other companies and organizations brought lovely dishes to share. My son Paul took a picture of us on the steps of my backyard caboose (WP668).

TechWomen Mentors . TechWomen Mentors

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson and Paul D. Goodman

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All things are ready, if our minds be so

My daughter Jessica’s wedding is in three days. 125 people are joining us in a lovely State Park on Saturday to celebrate the happy union under the redwoods. I am sure there is much which we have forgotten or neglected or mislaid but I trust in King Henry V: “All things are ready, if our minds be so.”

The Holmes and Dickinson families got together on Sunday for a pre-wedding pizza dinner, check-in, and games night. We played Munchkin – a fun game based on Dungeons and Dragons with silly cards such as

  • Curse! Duck of Doom (“You should know better than to pick up a duck in a dungeon”)
  • Swiss Army Polearm
  • Chainsaw of Bloody Dismemberment
  • Nasty-Tasting Sports Drink
  • Pantyhose of Giant Strength
  • Squidzilla (a monster)

We first played Munchkin when we visited Jessica last year in Qatar. Several of her professors at CMU-Q were addicted to the game.

Holmes Dickinson Game Night . Munchkin card game

Paul and Matt went together to get their hair cuts earlier this week (supervised by Jessica).  The soon-to-be-brothers-in-law look very handsome.  Last night, Jessica and Matt and I went to Costco to buy two shopping carts-full of wine, beer, champagne, sodas, and bottled water for the wedding reception.  Jessica has given us a written timeline (15 minute intervals) for The Day Before the Wedding and The Wedding Day.  I do not expect everything will go as planned but all will be well at the end.

Wedding Shopping at Costco Jessica Matthew . Wedding Shopping at Costco Jessica Matthew

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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Geeky Model Trains

Yolo Short Line Dinner Train

While I was in Washington DC with the TechWomen mentoring program, my husband John was giving technical presentations at the National Model Railroad Association convention in Sacramento, California. He talked about state-of-the-art for model train layout wiring and the use of Arduino electronics in model trains. John also went on a Yolo Short Line train ride in Sacramento, a tour of the Lehigh Permanente Cement Plant in Cupertino, Sacramento area model railroad layout tours, a visit to the excellent California State Railroad Museum, and a generally had fun with the boys while I was off hanging out with the girls.

Lehigh Cement Plant Tour, Cupertino CA

Images by John Plocher, Copyright 2011

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TechWomen – Last Day

TechWomen at Smithsonian . TechWomen at Smithsonian

7 July was the last day for the TechWomen visiting Washington DC. The day before, the program was honored by US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in her remarks in the Benjamin Franklin Room at the State Department. This extraordinary honor was followed by lunch, then a night tour of Washington DC by bus, then a party at our hotel. We took turns standing up to share words of affection and encouragement. There were tears, followed by two cakes secretly bought by the Mentees, followed by group hugs and much talk. Some of the Mentees were up until 4 am talking since we don’t know when we will all be back together again.

7 July was full of departures, last tours, final shopping, packing, more hugs, kisses goodbye, exchanging cards and little presents, and talk. A group went to visit the National Museum of Women in the Arts, followed by a tour of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. The National Museum of Women in the Arts was fascinating, particularly the centuries old paintings, and the Guerrilla Girls exhibit (“Fighting discrimination with facts, humor and fake fur!”). Growing up with an artist and CCA Professor for my mother (Eleanor Dickinson), I felt quite at home.  We had a pleasant ladies’ lunch at the museum restaurant. The group went on to see the International Spy Museum but I had to leave to catch my flight home to the San Francisco Bay Area.

My flight was uneventful other than seeing remarkably lovely cloud formations.  Since we were flying west in the evening, we were treated to a very long sunset.

Guerrilla Girls at National Museum of Women in the Arts . Adelaide Labille-Guiard 1790 oil portrait of an unknown woman
Clouds . sunset

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen and Secretary Hillary Rodam Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodam Clinton . US Secretary of State Hillary Rodam Clinton, Katy Dickinson

From the US State Department blog:

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton honored 37 women from the Middle East and North Africa and their American mentors who participated in TechWomen, an initiative that harnesses the power of technology and international exchanges as a means to empower women and girls worldwide, on July 6, 2011.

This story was carried in the news as well, including CNN’s “U.S. helps tech-savvy Mideastern women experience Silicon Valley” by Jill Dougherty.

The 37 TechWomen Mentees from 6 North African and Middle Eastern countries and their Silicon Valley Mentors and the program staff from the Anita Borg Institute (ABI) and the Institute of International Education (IIE) were in the State Department building again for meetings, a photo with Secretary Clinton, plus lunch in the Benjamin Franklin Room. Two of the Huawei Mentors (Kyna Sah and Att Athsani) plus Huawei Senior Vice President John Roese and I watched with pride as three TechWomen Mentees formed a panel which capably and charmingly answered questions in front of an audience of technical and political leaders.

Before and after the lunch, the TechWomen group was in the huge Henderson Conference Room downstairs where the US State Department honored the countries of the TechWomen by flying the flags of Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Palestine. The Mentees took turns having their photos taken with their flags. The Mentees who had given the most impressive talks at the final workshop were asked to form the lunch panel and give their talks again at the US State Department. Two of the Mentors joined the Mentees in the afternoon presentations. Huawei is proud that two of our TechWomen Mentees were asked to speak at the US State Department!

TechWomen from Palestine at US State Department . TechWomen Presentation at US State Department

TechWomen at US State Department

Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson

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