Lennox Superville

He also lectured as an adjunct professor in Basic Programming at Columbia University in the New York City in Summer 1977, Biostatistics for Nurses at St. Joseph College Brooklyn, 1978, and was the editor and author of Basic Skills: Arithmetic and Algebra, A modular Approach (1978, 1979) for first-year students entering CUNY under Open Admissions.

During his 2-year tenure, he was involved in the United States v. AT&T antitrust case that led to the 1982 Bell System divestiture and the testing of the cordless phone operating at a frequency of 2.7 MHz.

As a member of the Technical Staff at AT&T, Superville also evaluated programming codes on aircraft command control systems and verified heuristic algorithms.

Superville then joined Bell-Northern Research/Northern Telecom (BNR/Nortel Networks) in Research Triangle Park (RTP), North Carolina, in 1987 as a member of the scientific staff to develop knowledge and new technologies across the telecommunication sector.

[7] In 2010, Superville joined Keshav Consulting in Cary, North Carolina as a Senior Advisor and was the Principal Investigator in generating Photovoltaic electricity from US Roadways.

In 2012, Superville joined ITT Technical Institute as an adjunct professor to teach advanced calculus, specializing in elementary-point set theory and properties of continuous functions, differential equations, and Fourier analysis.