The Atlantic (Oct. 27) -- Twenty-year-old Rosalyn Sussman, who went on to receive the Nobel Prize in 1977, cut a steely, solitary figure in September 1941 as she started her doctorate in nuclear physics at Illinois. She was the only female faculty member among 400, and there were no women’s bathrooms in the lab facilities—a major inconvenience, especially during the many nights she spent sleeping on the floor of the lab. Sussman is included in the article about the "The Female Pioneers Who Changed STEM Forever." Also: The Huffington Post (from The Atlantic, Oct. 28).