Difference between revisions of "Milera, 2024"
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+ | * Caitlin Milera. 2024. [https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/newsnotes-41-1.pdf Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee]. ''NASA News & Notes'', Spring 2024, pp. 26-29 | ||
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+ | Drawn from Milera's dissertation: Caitlin [[Milera, 2022]], ''[https://commons.und.edu/theses/4279 Ms. Pearl Irma Young: "Raising Hell" For Women In Stem Fields And Women At NASA, 1914 - 1968]'' (2022). Theses and Dissertations, University of North Dakota | ||
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+ | * "Pearl Young was born on 12 October 1895 in Taopi, Minnesota, the second oldest of 11 children." | ||
+ | * "Young graduated with honors as a triple major in physics, mathematics, and chemistry from the University of North Dakota (UND) in 1919." | ||
+ | * She began wok at Langley aero lab (in Virginia?) in April 1922. The lab's name is abbreviated [[LMAL]] (Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory perhaps). | ||
+ | * Against " barriers that women faced in STEM and at the NACA/ NASA, Young persisted. She did so through acts of advocacy, establishing a network of connectedness, and ... remaining true to her authentic self." | ||
+ | * "In 1943, she authored a document entitled Style Manual for Engineering Authors, which served as a style guide for authors at Langley and other NACA laboratories" | ||
{{Publication | {{Publication | ||
− | |Original title= | + | |Original title=Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee |
− | |Simple title= | + | |Simple title=Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee |
− | |Authors= | + | |Authors=Caitlin Milera |
− | |Date= | + | |Date=2024 |
− | |Countries= | + | |Countries=US |
− | |Languages= | + | |Languages=en |
− | |Keywords= | + | |Keywords=Pearl Young; NASA history |
− | |Journal= | + | |Journal=NASA News & Notes |
− | |Related to aircraft= | + | |Related to aircraft=1 |
− | |Page count= | + | |Page count=4 |
|Word count= | |Word count= | ||
|Wikidata id= | |Wikidata id= | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 02:43, 17 April 2024
- Caitlin Milera. 2024. Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee. NASA News & Notes, Spring 2024, pp. 26-29
Drawn from Milera's dissertation: Caitlin Milera, 2022, Ms. Pearl Irma Young: "Raising Hell" For Women In Stem Fields And Women At NASA, 1914 - 1968 (2022). Theses and Dissertations, University of North Dakota
- "Pearl Young was born on 12 October 1895 in Taopi, Minnesota, the second oldest of 11 children."
- "Young graduated with honors as a triple major in physics, mathematics, and chemistry from the University of North Dakota (UND) in 1919."
- She began wok at Langley aero lab (in Virginia?) in April 1922. The lab's name is abbreviated LMAL (Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory perhaps).
- Against " barriers that women faced in STEM and at the NACA/ NASA, Young persisted. She did so through acts of advocacy, establishing a network of connectedness, and ... remaining true to her authentic self."
- "In 1943, she authored a document entitled Style Manual for Engineering Authors, which served as a style guide for authors at Langley and other NACA laboratories"
Original title | Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee |
---|---|
Simple title | Pearl Irma Young: The Lasting Impact of the NACA’s First Female Technical Employee |
Authors | Caitlin Milera |
Date | 2024 |
Countries | US |
Languages | en |
Keywords | Pearl Young, NASA history |
Journal | NASA News & Notes |
Related to aircraft? | 1 |
Page count | 4 |
Word count | |
Wikidata id |