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FRANCES RICE DARNE
Frances Violet Rice was born in New York,
N.Y. on July 2, 1901. Her parents were Dr. Joseph M. Rice and
Deborah Levinson Rice. She attended Germantown High School in
Philadelphia, Pa. She entered Cornell University in September
1919 and was, in 1923, the first female to receive the
Electrical Engineering degree from Cornell University. At
Cornell she was very active as she was a member of the
Dramatic Club, member and president of the Mandolin Club,
member of the Womens' Glee Club, 4 year member
and captain of the womens' basketball team, participant and
manager of the womens' baseball team, and on the womens' track
team. She was also a student member of the American Institute
of Electrical Engineers. Her picture is in the 1923 Cornell
yearbook.
After graduation Frances Rice spent 10
years as a secretary at the Travelers Insurance Company in
Philadelphia. She became a member of the American Radio Relay
League and had her own amateur radio station, W3AKB, in 1927.
In 1937 she noted that she was
interested in cryptography. In 1937 she took a position at RCA
Laboratories, Camden, New Jersey as secretary and laboratory
assistant to Dr. Vladimir K. Zworykin, one of television's
pioneers.

On June 15, 1942, Frances Rice became a
civilian Electronic Engineer for the Bureau of Ships of the US
Navy. On September 8, 1945, she married Eppa Webster Darne.
They did not have any children. In 1954, Frances Rice Darne
was working under Walter Greer and she became the Navy Member
and Chairman of the Working Group on Special Tubes of the
Advisory Group on Electron Tubes of the Department of Defense.
Shortly later she became the Navy Member of the Working Group
on Tube Techniques. In 1961, AGED
became the Advisory Group on Electron Devices and Frances
Darne became the Navy Member of the Working Group on Special
Devices. Frances Darne was also a member of the Subcommittee
on Indicator and Pickup Tubes of the Armed Services
Electronics Technical Committee. By 1957, Frances Rice Darne
was in Code 816, the Electron Tube Section of the Design
Standards Branch (Code 815) under the Assistant Chief of
Bureau for Electronics (Code 800) and was working in the Main
Navy Building on Constitution at 18th Street. Reorganizations
by 1965 changed her to Code 681A-1, Tubes and Semiconductors,
in the Electronic Warfare and Parts Branch, still at the Main
Navy Building. Frances visited many Navy and contractor
laboratories who wanted sponsorship of display development by
the Navy - and she was therefore well known in the display
community. Many of the contracts which she sponsored resulted
in advances in the state-of-the-art of displays.
Frances Rice Darne was a charter member of
the Society for Information Display and was active in 1963, as
a member of the steering committee, in forming the Washington
Chapter of SID. She is listed in the January 1963 list of SID
officers as the Recording Secretary-Treasurer of the
Washington chapter. She died on December 21, 1965.
Frances R. Darne was posthumously made a
Fellow of SID on March 31, 1966 at a SID Board of Directors
meeting associated with a National Seminar in Santa Monica.
The citation was "For contributions to the science of
information displays, particularly in the standardization of
cathode ray and scan converter tubes. Also for the initiation
of scientific efforts for development of electron and CRT
military specifications." The presentation was made by
Ernest N. Storrs of the Federal Aviation Agency and was
reported in the May/June 1966 "Information Display".
The Frances Rice Darne Memorial Award was
created at the SID Board of Directors Meeting on October 17,
1966. The award was first presented in 1971 and has been made
almost every subsequent year.
This report has been complied with the help of:
Bernard J. Lechner
Jan A. Rajchman
Irv Reingold
Munsey E. Crost
Erick N. Swenson
Thomas Henion
David Slater
Cornell University Library Services
Robert C. Knepper
SID Historian
22 April 1986
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