Tumgik
#judith cohen
secular-jew · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Call-out to Jack Black's mom!
170 notes · View notes
khruschevshoe · 1 year
Text
Judith Cohen, Assistant to the President
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I bet on losing dogs
I know they're losing and I pay for my place
By the ring
Where I'll be looking in their eyes when they're down
I'll be there on their side
I'm losing by their side
-Mitski, I Bet On Losing Dogs
Judith often said that she would fist fight God if she thought that it would give her a shot at getting a bill through congress. But that wasn't enough. Not anymore.
We were alone against the mountain and the experts were predicting avalanche. No matter how fast we planted trees, the rocks wouldn't stop falling.
-Kenna Jenkins, Burn the House Down
@henrythepug @flower-crowned-lady
4 notes · View notes
dduane · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
"Judith Love Cohen, who helped create the Abort-Guidance System which rescued the Apollo 13 astronauts, went to work on the day she was in labor. She took a printout of a problem she was working on to the hospital. She called her boss and said she finished the problem and gave birth to actor Jack Black.
"Judith Love Cohen was, at various times in her fascinating life, an engineer who worked on the Pioneer, Apollo, and Hubble missions, an author & publisher of books about women in STEM and environmentalism in the 90s, a ballet dancer with the New York Metropolitan Opera Ballet Company, an advocate for better treatment of women in the workplace, and actor Jack Black's mother. From an obituary written by her son Neil Siegel after her death in 2016:
“'My mother usually considered her work on the Apollo program to be the highlight of her career. When disaster struck the Apollo 13 mission, it was the Abort-Guidance System that brought the astronauts home safely. Judy was there when the Apollo 13 astronauts paid a "thank you" [visit] to the TRW facility in Redondo Beach.'”
"She finished her engineering career running the systems engineering for the science ground facility of the Hubble Space Telescope.
"During her engineering career, she was a vigorous and tireless advocate of better treatment for women in the workplace. Many things that today we consider routine - the posting of job openings inside of a company so that anyone could apply, formal job descriptions for every position, and so forth - were her creations. She had a profound impact on equality in the workforce.
(via @historyinmemes at Twitter)
2K notes · View notes
eretzyisrael · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Source
288 notes · View notes
classycookiexo · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
35 notes · View notes
aduckmentalistin · 1 year
Text
Judith Love Cohen
Judith Love Cohen was the aerospace engineer who made Apollo's Abort Guidance System, which was crucial to saving the ill-fated Apollo 13. She was troubleshooting problems with schematics on the day she went into labor, called her boss to let him know she had fixed the problem and then delivered Jack, the actor Jack Black.
21 notes · View notes
porterdavis · 2 years
Text
I had no idea...
38 notes · View notes
higherentity · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
citedesdames · 9 months
Text
0 notes
spacelazarwolf · 9 months
Text
in honor of that anon who said jews have done nothing for the world, here’s a non exhaustive list of things we’ve done for the world:
arts, fashion, and lifestyle:
jeans - levi strauss
modern bras - ida rosenthal
sewing machines - isaac merritt singer
modern film industry - carl laemmle (universal pictures), adolph zukor (paramount pictures), william fox (fox film forporation), louis b. mayer (mgm - metro-goldwyn-mayer), harry, sam, albert, and jack warners (warner bros.), steven spielberg, mel brooks, marx brothers
operetta - jacques offenbach
comic books - stan lee
graphic novels - will eisner
teddy bears - morris and rose michtom
influential musicians - irving berlin, stephen sondheim, benny goodman, george gershwin, paul simon, itzhak perlman, leonard bernstein, bob dylan, leonard cohen
artists - mark rothko
actors - elizabeth taylor, jerry lewis, barbara streisand
comedians - lenny bruce, joan rivers, jerry seinfeld
authors - judy blume, tony kushner, allen ginsberg, walter mosley
culture:
esperanto - ludwik lazar zamenhof
feminism - betty friedan, gloria steinem, ruth bader ginsberg
queer and trans rights - larry kramer, harvey milk, leslie feinberg, abby stein, kate bornstein, frank kameny, judith butler
international women's day - clara zetkin
principles of journalizm, statue of liberty, and pulitzer prize - joseph pulitzer
"the new colossus" - emma lazarus
universal declaration of human rights - rene samuel cassin
holocaust remembrance and human rights activism - elie wiesel
workers rights - louis brandeis, rose schneiderman
public health care, women's rights, and children's rights - lillian wald
racial equity - rabbi abraham joshua heschel, julius rosenwald, andrew goodman, michael schwerner
political theory - hannah arendt
disability rights - judith heumann
black lives matter slogan and movement - alicia garza
#metoo movement - jodi kantor
institute of sexology - magnus hirschfeld
technology:
word processing computers - evelyn berezin
facebook - mark zuckerberg
console video game system - ralph henry baer
cell phones - amos edward joel jr., martin cooper
3d - leonard lipton
telephone - philipp reis
fax machines - arthur korn
microphone - emile berliner
gramophone - emile berliner
television - boris rosing
barcodes - norman joseph woodland and bernard silver
secret communication system, which is the foundation of the technology used for wifi - hedy lamarr
three laws of robotics - isaac asimov
cybernetics - norbert wiener
helicopters - emile berliner
BASIC (programming language) - john george kemeny
google - sergey mikhaylovich brin and larry page
VCR - jerome lemelson
fax machine - jerome lemelson
telegraph - samuel finley breese morse
morse code - samuel finley breese morse
bulletproof glass - edouard benedictus
electric motor and electroplating - boris semyonovich jacobi
nuclear powered submarine - hyman george rickover
the internet - paul baran
icq instant messenger - arik vardi, yair goldfinger,, sefi vigiser, amnon amir
color photography - leopold godowsky and leopold mannes
world's first computer - herman goldstine
modern computer architecture - john von neumann
bittorrent - bram cohen
voip internet telephony - alon cohen
data archiving - phil katz, eugene roshal, abraham lempel, jacob ziv
nemeth code - abraham nemeth
holography - dennis gabor
laser - theodor maiman
instant photo sharing online - philippe kahn
first automobile - siegfried samuel marcus
electrical maglev road - boris petrovich weinberg
drip irrigation - simcha blass
ballpoint pen and automatic gearbox - laszlo biro
photo booth - anatol marco josepho
medicine:
pacemakers and defibrillators - louise robinovitch
defibrillators - bernard lown
anti-plague and anti-cholera vaccines - vladimir aronovich khavkin
polio vaccine - jonas salk
test for diagnosis of syphilis - august paul von wasserman
test for typhoid fever - ferdinand widal
penicillin - ernst boris chain
pregnancy test - barnhard zondek
antiretroviral drug to treat aids and fight rejection in organ transplants - gertrude elion
discovery of hepatitis c virus - harvey alter
chemotherapy - paul ehrlich
discovery of prions - stanley prusiner
psychoanalysis - sigmund freud
rubber condoms - julius fromm
birth control pill - gregory goodwin pincus
asorbic acid (vitamin c) - tadeusz reichstein
blood groups and rh blood factor - karl landsteiner
acyclovir (treatment for infections caused by herpes virus) - gertrude elion
vitamins - caismir funk
technique for measuring blood insulin levils - rosalyn sussman yalow
antigen for hepatitus - baruch samuel blumberg
a bone fusion technique - gavriil abramovich ilizarov
homeopathy - christian friedrich samuel hahnemann
aspirin - arthur ernst eichengrun
science:
theory of relativity - albert einstein
theory of the electromagnetic field - james maxwell
quantum mechanics - max born, gustav ludwig hertz
quantum theory of gravity - matvei bronstein
microbiology - ferdinand julius cohn
neuropsychology - alexander romanovich luria
counters for x-rays and gamma rays - robert hofstadter
genetic engineering - paul berg
discovery of the antiproton - emilio gino segre
discovery of cosmic microwave background radiation - arno allan penzias
discovery of the accelerating expansion of the universe - adam riess and saul merlmutter
discovery that black hole formation is a robust prediction of the general theory of relativity - roger penrose
discovery of a supermassive compact object at the center of the milky way - andrea ghez
modern cosmology and the big bang theory - alexander alexandrovich friedmann
stainless steel - hans goldschmidt
gas powered vehicles
interferometer - albert abraham michelson
discovery of the source of energy production in stars - hans albrecht bethe
proved poincare conjecture - grigori yakovlevich perelman
biochemistry - otto fritz meyerhof
electron-positron collider - bruno touschek
3K notes · View notes
Text
Judith Love Cohen
Aerospace engineer Judith Love Cohen was born in 1933 in Brooklyn, New York. Cohen worked on the Hubble Space Telescope, the Minuteman Missile, and the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite. She is best remembered, however, for her work on the Apollo Program. Cohen was on the team that created the Abort-Guidance in the program's Lunar Excursion Module, the system that brought the Apollo 13 astronauts home safely.
Judith Love Cohen died in 2016 at the age of 82.
13 notes · View notes
girlactionfigure · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Judith Love Cohen, the mother of actor Jack Black, helped design the critical Abort Guidance System that allowed the Apollo 13 astronauts to safely make it back to Earth.
As a teenager, Judith Love Cohen went to a guidance counselor to talk about her future and professed her deep love of math. But the counselor had other advice. She said: “I think you ought to go to a nice finishing school and learn to be a lady.”
Instead, Cohen pursued her dreams. She studied engineering at USC and later helped design the program that saved the Apollo 13 astronauts. In retirement, Cohen produced books encouraging young girls to follow in her footsteps. 
Although her son, Jack Black, is certainly the most famous of the family, his mother has a remarkable story all her own.
More: Here
Weird History
220 notes · View notes
khruschevshoe · 2 years
Text
Sometimes a family is a feral autistic creek First Daughter, her two moms (one of which is the President and other of which is the best woman to ever live), her step-dad the sleepwalking First Gentleman, her uncle the drag queen, a very, very sleep-deprived Assistant to the President, and David the Dog, the goodest boy
1 note · View note
u-mspcoll · 8 months
Text
Researching Sephardic Cooking in the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive
Tumblr media
The Jewish Manual...(1846) by Lady Judith Cohen Montefiore (Special Collections Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive, Cookery 1846 Mo)
Enjoy this guest post by Nathalie Ross, Heid Fellow, on her research in the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive. Nathalie is a doctoral candidate in the History Department at the University of North Texas, specializing in Jewish Food Studies.
36 notes · View notes
luthiery · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
gideon the ninth // a man is what he eats: a reading of the odyssey (judith b. herman) // gideon the ninth // love of the wolf (hélène cixous, trans. keith cohen) // harrow the ninth 
269 notes · View notes
have-a-hiddles · 1 month
Text
Happy Birthday to me!
Here’s some (mostly positive) stuff about the year I was born:
Chinese Year of the Horse
United States Senate proceedings are broadcast on radio for the first time.
The People's Republic of China lifts a ban on works by Aristotle, William Shakespeare and Charles Dickens.
The first global positioning satellite, the Rockwell International-built Navstar 1, is launched by the United States.
The first radio episode of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams, is transmitted on BBC Radio 4.
San Francisco's City Council signs the United States's most comprehensive gay rights bill.
Dallas debuts on CBS, and gives birth to the modern day primetime soap opera.
At the 50th Academy Awards, Annie Hall won four Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director (Woody Allen), and Best Actress (Diane Keaton). On the other hand, Star Wars won six Oscars, including Best Film Editing, Best Visual Effects, and Best Art Direction. Finally, Madame Rosa (France) won an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.
Izhar Cohen & the Alphabeta win the Eurovision Song Contest 1978 for Israel with their song A-Ba-Ni-Bi.
The Bee Gees' album, Saturday Night Fever, went #1 for 24 weeks.
Sarajevo is selected to host the 1984 Winter Olympics, and Los Angeles is selected to host the 1984 Summer Olympics.
Mavis Hutchinson, 53, becomes the first woman to run across the U.S.; her trek took 69 days.
The Dallas Cowboys won the Super Bowl, the Washington Bullets were the NBA champs, and the Montreal Canadiens clinched the Stanley Cup.
Garfield's first comic strip, originally published locally as Jon in 1976, goes into nationwide syndication.
Charon, a satellite of Pluto, is discovered.
The rainbow flag of the LGBT movement flies for the first time (in its original form) at the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade.
Louise Brown, the world's first test tube baby, is born in Oldham, Greater Manchester, UK.
Pope John Paul I succeeds Pope Paul VI as the 263rd Pope.
NASA unveiled the first group of women astronauts: Shannon W. Lucid, Margaret Rhea Seddon, Kathryn D. Sullivan, Judith A. Resnik, Anna L. Fisher, and Sally K. Ride.
Pope John Paul I dies after only 33 days of papacy.
United States President Jimmy Carter signs a bill that authorizes the minting of the Susan B. Anthony dollar.
Pope John Paul II succeeds Pope John Paul I as the 264th pope, resulting in the first Year of Three Popes since 1605.
Abolitionist Harriet Tubman became the first African-American woman to be honored on a U.S. postage stamp.
Chicago serial killer John Wayne Gacy is arrested.
Cabbage Patch Kids are first created.
The video game Space Invaders launched a craze for computer video games.
The first email system was created at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark, N.J.
The first spam email was sent by Gary Thuerk, a marketing manager who was promoting a new model of computer. Thuerk sent the correspondence out to about 600 prospects via ARPANET, and “complaints started coming in almost immediately.”
Illinois Bell Company introduced the first-ever Cellular Mobile Phone System.
Pulitzer Prize was awarded to Carl Sagan for his book, The Dragons of Eden.
 At the 30th Primetime Emmy Awards, All in the Family (CBS) won an Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series, and The Rockford Files (NBC) won an Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series. Carroll O’Connor (All in the Family) won an Emmy for Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series, and Jean Stapleton (All in the Family) won an Emmy for Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Comedy Series.
At the 35th Golden Globe Awards, The Turning Point won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Drama, and The Goodbye Girl won a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Comedy or Musical.
Actor Ashton Kutcher was born on Feb. 7, 1978 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Actor James Franco was born in Palo Alto, Calif. on April 19, 1978.
Actor Jason Biggs was born on May 12, 1978, in Pompton Plains, N.J.
Actress Zoe Saldana was born on June 19, 1978.
Singer Nicole Scherzinger was born on June 29, 1978.
Actor Josh Harnett was born on July 21, 1978.
 NBA star Kobe Bryant was born on Aug. 23, 1978.
Singer Usher was born on Oct. 14, 1978.
Actress Katherine Marie Heigl was born in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 24, 1978.
Popular movies included: Grease, Saturday Night Fever, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Star Wars (the first one), Superman: The Movie, and Halloween.
 The most popular baby names for boys were Michael, Jason, Christopher, David, and James. 
The most popular baby names for girls were Jennifer, Melissa, Jessica, Amy, and Heather. 
8 notes · View notes