Gail H. Marcus ’68, SM ’68, ScD ’71, and Michael J. Marcus ’68, ScD ’72, Shape Policy in Washington
Gail Halpern and Michael Marcus met in a first-year chemistry class, began dating as sophomores, and got married two days after graduation. They went on to study physics and nuclear engineering (Gail) and electrical engineering (Mike), before launching careers that would have a big impact on technology policies in nuclear power, in Gail’s case, and wireless communications, in Mike’s.
“We both gravitated toward the integration of technology into society—what to fund, how to regulate, how to balance different interests,” says Gail. “They’re not strictly engineering problems, but we both felt it was essential for engineers to be involved.”
Or, as Mike puts it, “We started as techies and became policy wonks.”

Mike joined the Air Force after graduation, which brought the pair to Washington, D.C., in the early ’70s. Both were drawn to tech-oriented analytical work at think tanks and research agencies.
In 1979, Mike met Stephen Lukasik, ScD ’56, the first chief scientist of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Lukasik was looking for technologies that could be opened for public use, and Mike offered three suggestions, including spread-spectrum/CDMA communications.
That began 25 years at the FCC, where Mike proposed and developed policies for making more than eight gigahertz of radio spectrum available for unlicensed use, paving the way for the initial generations of Wi-Fi as well as the Bluetooth and ZigBee protocols. He has received multiple honors for this work, including the 2013 IEEE ComSoc Award for Public Service in the Field of Telecommunications; in 1997 he won a Mansfield Fellowship, allowing the couple to spend a year in Japan.
Gail, meanwhile, moved in 1985 from legislation-related work at the Congressional Research Service to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and, later, to the Department of Energy (DOE).
Among her many contributions at the NRC, she provided expertise on top-level policy decisions for a commissioner and played a major role in developing the Principles of Good Regulation, a single-page statement of the agency’s values. Still a touchstone for the NRC’s work, the document has served as a model for a number of U.S. and foreign government agencies and other organizations, and it was celebrated by the NRC at a 25th-anniversary event in 2016.
Gail served as president of the American Nuclear Society in 2001–’02, and her time as deputy director-general of the intergovernmental Nuclear Energy Agency gave the couple a three-year stint in Paris. Her book, Nuclear Firsts: Milestones on the Road to Nuclear Power Development, won the 2013 ASME Engineer-Historian Award.
Both Gail and Mike continue to consult in their fields and to mentor students—and in their spare time, they love to sail.
Keep Reading
Most Popular
The inside story of how ChatGPT was built from the people who made it
Exclusive conversations that take us behind the scenes of a cultural phenomenon.
How Rust went from a side project to the world’s most-loved programming language
For decades, coders wrote critical systems in C and C++. Now they turn to Rust.
Design thinking was supposed to fix the world. Where did it go wrong?
An approach that promised to democratize design may have done the opposite.
Sam Altman invested $180 million into a company trying to delay death
Can anti-aging breakthroughs add 10 healthy years to the human life span? The CEO of OpenAI is paying to find out.
Stay connected
Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review
Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.