Dunn, Dana Becker2017-06-152017-06-152016-01-07Dana Becker Dunn, OH 495. Oral history interview by Thomas J. Misa, 7 January 2016. Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.OH 495https://hdl.handle.net/11299/188485Transcript, 43 pp.Dana Becker Dunn graduated from a rural Illinois high school, then attended Southern Illinois University as a math major taking numerous computing courses and graduating in 1972. She joined Bells Labs as one of the last STA ‘courtship’ hires, completing a master’s in electrical engineering and computer science from Northwestern University. Her technical career began in operating systems programming, with a specialty in relational databases; then she was promoted into supervisory positions in the AT&T headquarters in New Jersey. As a Sloan Fellow she completed an executive MBA at MIT in 1984 then went to work for AT&T information systems division. Among her managerial responsibilities were connecting marketing and technical staffs; overseeing large operational groups in marketing and communications; and in 1994 separating Lucent Technologies from AT&T. She retired in 2001 as an officer of Avaya. She reflects on the transformation of women’s issues within AT&T, including a suggestion that with overt forms of discrimination largely banished, it may have ‘gone underground’ and be more difficult to locate. This material is based on work funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation award B2014-07 “Tripling Women’s Participation in Computing (1965-1985).”enComputer historyWomen's historyGenderAlfred P. Sloan FoundationBell Telephone Laboratories, inc.Database access systemsLucent TechnologiesMember of Technical Staff (MTS)Men and Women in the Work Environment (Workshop)Senior Technical Aide (STA)Women’s movementMentoringSouthern Illinois UniversityAT&T -- Long LinesOral history interview with Dana Becker DunnOral History