Four years later, Emanuel got promoted to and worked as associate professor of chemistry at Central State College (a historically black college and now Central State University) in Wilberforce, Ohio until 1954.[1] Emanuel was offered an assistantship and the opportunity to study for PhD in University of New Mexico. Lawson finished her PhD in radiochemistry with a dissertation of Behavior of Indium at Tracer Concentrations in 1957.[1][2]
Career
Katheryn Emanuel Lawson started work as a biochemist in Veterans Administration Hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1957.[1] A year later, she was invited to work in Sandia National Laboratories in Crystal Physics Research Division. At that time, Sandia Labs needed PhD graduates to work on weapon development.[1] Lawson worked in material research while her job was to analyze molecular structure of irradiated materials.[1] She also studied optical properties of transition metals and their combination with other elements. She tested their electrical and magnetic properties, which helped prove Crystal Field Theory.[3]
While at Sandia National Labs, Lawson successively published several papers and books throughout her career. Her works include Behavior of carrier-free tracers,[4]Infrared absorption of inorganic substances[5] and Ion-exchange resins, a bibliography of unclassified references,[6] and thermal properties of protective materials.[7] In 1965, she was featured with her husband Kenneth Lawson in Ebony Magazine.[1][3]
Later in her career, she committed to National Urban League's Black Executive Exchange Program to advise young African American to pursue higher education and to advise white manager to accept and recommend them.[1] She also served on Fair Housing Board in Albuquerque after 1963.[3]
Katheryn Emanuel Lawson married Kenneth Lawson, who was a chemist-bacteriologist studying for PhD in University of New Mexico, in 1954.[1][3] The couple had two sons, William, who was born when she was in graduate school, and Kenneth Jr.[1] Lawson died in Farmington, Michigan on September 25, 2008.[1][2]
^Kahn, M., Lawson, K. Emanuel., Jones, K. B., Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory., U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. (1960). Behavior of carrier-free tracers: (a bibliography of unclassified references). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico.
^Lawson, Katheryn Emanuel. Infrared Absorption of Inorganic Substances. New York: Reinhold, 1961.
^Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, et al.. Ion-exchange Resins, a Bibliography of Unclassified References. Los Alamos, N.M.: Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory of the University of California, 1957.