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The original message has been attached to this so you can view it or label similar future email. If you have any questions, see the administrator of that system for details. Content preview: Enjoy deals all week long lojban it has come to our attention that a-$50-Macys card s available for you to use on just about anything. Just participate to begin. http://www.streamsoffers.com/purified-postulation/c24nD865C7.6n102qxivLKhFxivLKhzilsdW6 [...] Content analysis details: (4.8 points, 5.0 required) pts rule name description ---- ---------------------- -------------------------------------------------- 1.0 FROM_OFFERS From address is "at something-offers" 0.0 URIBL_BLOCKED ADMINISTRATOR NOTICE: The query to URIBL was blocked. See http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DnsBlocklists#dnsbl-block for more information. 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With the world watching, the new organization carrying the American banner into space would have to be clean, technically perfect, and meritocratic, the bearer of a myth. The transition from the NACA to NASA didnt change Langleys facilities significantly, nor did it require drastic changes in the laboratorys staff. But the shift in attitude and in public responsibility at the laboratory were as distinct in character as the golden age of aeronautics of the 1950s would be from the spaceage 1960s. The quirky place where upstart engineers competed to bootleg their own projects with the knog k of their supervisors, where a central laboratory had grown organically into a culturally cohesive organization of five thousand had, from October 1957 to October 1958, become a highprofile bureaucracy with ten research centers and ten thousand employees. As the Space Act of 1958 made its way through Congress, trailing behind it the sheaves of legal documents and memoranda required to bring NASA to life, one memo quietly circulated at what was soon to be renamed the Langley Research Center, authored by Langleys assistant director, Floyd Thompson, dated May 5, 1958, officially ending segregation at Langley. Effective this date, the West Area Computers Unit is dissolved. As the clock ticked down on the NACA, only nine West Computers remained in the pool: Dorothy Vaughan, Marjorie Peddrew, Isabelle Mann, Lorraine Satchell, Arminta Cooke, Hester Lovely, Daisy Alston, Christine Richie, Pearl Bassette, and Eunice Smith. With one terse line of text, NASA crossed a frontier that had not been breached by its predecessor. The memo heralded the end of an era, the swan song of the Band of Sisters. The story of West Area Computinghow Dorothy Vaughan and her colleagues found their way to Langley, the tragedy and hope of World War II, the tyranny of the signs in the Langley cafeteria and on the bathroom doors, the womens contributions to one of the most transformative technologies in the history of humankindwould get passed along as family lore, but leave barely a fingerprint in the histories of the black men and women who fought for progress in their communities, of the women who pushed for equality for their gender in all aspects of American life, or of the engineers and mathematicians who taught humans to fly. For the rest of their lives, the former West Computers reminisced with one another and with the East Computers and the engineers they worked with. They told tales at the retirement parties that crowded they desired to leave Earth out of a compelling urge to go where no human had gone before. Katherine had always been driven by curiosity, and as the activity in and around Building 1244 crescendoed, it consumed her. Eisenhowers brochure put forth a vague, practically useless timetable for when the United States might be expected to achieve a variety of objectives in space: Early, Later, Still Later, And Much Later Still. The real scheduleand no one knew this better than the people in Building 1244was As Soon As Humanly Possible. When America should venture beyond the confines of Earth was just as obvious as why. But how? That was what Katherine Goble ached to know. She was far from alone. The plan for planting the American flag in the heavens, and the decision regarding who would lead the charge, was the table topic at WrightPatterson Air Force Base in Ohio, at Wernher von Brauns Army Ballistic Missile Agency in Alabama, and at the Naval Observatory in Washington, DC. Officials gathered around conference tables at the NACA headquarters and at each of the NACA laboratories, concerned with plotting the quickest possible path into space. Nowhere vibrated with more anticipation than Langley. Katherine Johnsons deskmatesJohn Mayer, Ted Skopinski, Alton Mayo, Harold Al Hamer, Carl Hussmoved from one meeting to another, conferring with each other, with their bosses, with representatives of aircraft manufacturers and military services, turning to every possible source in order to aggregate intelligence for the still inchoate endeavor. The only real reference that the Langley brain busters could lay their hands on was Introduction to Celestial Mechanics, a 1914 textbook by Forest Ray Moulton. So the engineers, who knew more about flying vehicles than any others, began scaling the next learning curve. Katherines branch chief, Henry Pearson, had enabled her to make good on her promise to her children and their futures. With their educations on track and a house of her own in her namethe Vaughans also left Newsome Park, in 1962there was nothing stopping Dorothy from making the final years of her career about her own ambitions. She was the smartest of all the s, Katherine Goble would say of her colleague, years into her own retirement. Dot Vaughan had brains coming out of her ears (and Katherine Goble knew from brains). Dorothy was proud of the way she had navigated through the days of racial segregation, proud of whatever small share she might claim in contributing to the demise of that backward practice. She had watched the women of West Computing, along with the others at the laboratory, take flight within the NACAs research operations; together, they proved that given opportunity and support, a female mind was the analytical equal of its male counterpart. But despite knog for many years that this day would eventually come, and having done everything within her power to bring it about, the victory she savored as the memo circulated was tempered with disappointment. Progress for the group meant a step back for its leader; Dorothys career as a manager came to an end on the last day of the West Area Computing office. Dorothy had never been one to linger over the past; the decade waiting in the gs promised to be one of the most interesting ever witnessed at the laboratory. For better or worse, Langleys fresh start was giving Dorothy Vaughan a fresh start as well. She would now begin life at the new agency as she had started her career at the NACA: as just one of the s. CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Outer Space This is not science fiction, wrote President Eisenhower, their calendars in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s, but with the modesty characteristic of women of their generation, they were reluctant to describe their achievements as anything more than just doing their jobs. The end of the West Area Computing section was a bittersweet moment for Dorothy Vaughan. It had taken her eight years to reach the seat at the front of the office. For seven years after that she ruled the most unlikely of realms: a room full of black female mathematicians, doing research at the worlds most prestigious aeronautical laboratory. Her stewardship of the section had supported the careers of women like Katherine Goble, who would ultimately receive her countrys highest recognition for her contributions to the space program. The standards upheld by the women of West Computing set a floor for the possibilities of a new generation of s with a passion for math and hopes for a career beyond teaching. Just as the original NACAites would forever hold on to their identities as members of that venerable organization, the black women would always feel an allegiance to West Area Computing, and to the woman who led it to its final day, Dorothy Vaughan. Dorothy was fortyeight years old in October 1958, with more than a decade of work still stretching out before her. Her older children, so tiny when she had first come to Hampton Roads, were now entering college. The younger s were ts follog fast in the path of their older siblings. Her work at Langley ------=_Part_115_406134501.1487706263074 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit whisper in the ear

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information concerning its activities, with all failures and tragedies of the endeavor laid bare to the citizenry and broadcast through the influential young medium of television. With the world watching, the new organization carrying the American banner into space would have to be clean, technically perfect, and meritocratic, the bearer of a myth. The transition from the NACA to NASA didnt change Langleys facilities significantly, nor did it require drastic changes in the laboratorys staff. But the shift in attitude and in public responsibility at the laboratory were as distinct in character as the golden age of aeronautics of the 1950s would be from the spaceage 1960s. The quirky place where upstart engineers competed to bootleg their own projects with the knog k of their supervisors, where a central laboratory had grown organically into a culturally cohesive organization of five thousand had, from October 1957 to October 1958, become a highprofile bureaucracy with ten research centers and ten thousand employees. As the Space Act of 1958 made its way through Congress, trailing behind it the sheaves of legal documents and memoranda required to bring NASA to life, one memo quietly circulated at what was soon to be renamed the Langley Research Center, authored by Langleys assistant director, Floyd Thompson, dated May 5, 1958,






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  officially ending segregation at Langley. Effective this date, the West Area Computers Unit is dissolved. As the clock ticked down on the NACA, only nine West Computers remained in the pool: Dorothy Vaughan, Marjorie Peddrew, Isabelle Mann, Lorraine Satchell, Arminta Cooke, Hester Lovely, Daisy Alston, Christine Richie, Pearl Bassette, and Eunice Smith. With one terse line of text, NASA crossed a frontier that had not been breached by its predecessor. The memo heralded the end of an era, the swan song of the Band of Sisters. The story of West Area Computinghow Dorothy Vaughan and her colleagues found their way to Langley, the tragedy and hope of World War II, the tyranny of the signs in the Langley cafeteria and on the bathroom doors, the womens contributions to one of the most transformative technologies in the history of humankindwould get passed along as family lore, but leave barely a fingerprint in the histories of the black men and women who fought for progress in their communities, of the women who pushed for equality for their gender in all aspects of American life, or of the engineers and mathematicians who taught humans to fly. For the rest of their lives, the former West Computers reminisced with one another and with the East Computers and the engineers they worked with. They told tales at the retirement parties that crowded  
  they desired to leave Earth out of a compelling urge to go where no human had gone before. Katherine had always been driven by curiosity, and as the activity in and around Building 1244 crescendoed, it consumed her. Eisenhowers brochure put forth a vague, practically useless timetable for when the United States might be expected to achieve a variety of objectives in space: Early, Later, Still Later, And Much Later Still. The real scheduleand no one knew this better than the people in Building 1244was As Soon As Humanly Possible. When America should venture beyond the confines of Earth was just as obvious as why. But how? That was what Katherine Goble ached to know. She was far from alone. The plan for planting the American flag in the heavens, and the decision regarding who would lead the charge, was the table topic at WrightPatterson Air Force Base in Ohio, at Wernher von Brauns Army Ballistic Missile Agency in Alabama, and at the Naval Observatory in Washington, DC. Officials gathered around conference tables at the NACA headquarters and at each of the NACA laboratories, concerned with plotting the quickest possible path into space. Nowhere vibrated with more anticipation than Langley. Katherine Johnsons deskmatesJohn Mayer, Ted Skopinski, Alton Mayo, Harold Al Hamer, Carl Hussmoved from one meeting to another, conferring with each other, with their bosses, with representatives of aircraft manufacturers and military services, turning to every possible source in order to aggregate intelligence for the still inchoate endeavor. The only real reference that the Langley brain busters could lay their hands on was Introduction to Celestial Mechanics, a 1914 textbook by Forest Ray Moulton. So the engineers, who knew more about flying vehicles than any others, began scaling the next learning curve. Katherines branch chief, Henry Pearson,  
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  had enabled her to make good on her promise to her children and their futures. With their educations on track and a house of her own in her namethe Vaughans also left Newsome Park, in 1962there was nothing stopping Dorothy from making the final years of her career about her own ambitions. She was the smartest of all the s, Katherine Goble would say of her colleague, years into her own retirement. Dot Vaughan had brains coming out of her ears (and Katherine Goble knew from brains). Dorothy was proud of the way she had navigated through the days of racial segregation, proud of whatever small share she might claim in contributing to the demise of that backward practice. She had watched the women of West Computing, along with the others at the laboratory, take flight within the NACAs research operations; together, they proved that given opportunity and support, a female mind was the analytical equal of its male counterpart. But despite knog for many years that this day would eventually come, and having done everything within her power to bring it about, the victory she savored as the memo circulated was tempered with disappointment. Progress for the group meant a step back for its leader; Dorothys career as a manager came to an end on the last day of the West Area Computing office. Dorothy had never been one to linger over the past; the decade waiting in the gs promised to be one of the most interesting ever witnessed at the laboratory. For better or worse, Langleys fresh start was giving Dorothy Vaughan a fresh start as well. She would now begin life at the new agency as she had started her career at the NACA: as just one of the s. CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Outer Space This is not science fiction, wrote President Eisenhower,  
  their calendars in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s, but with the modesty characteristic of women of their generation, they were reluctant to describe their achievements as anything more than just doing their jobs. The end of the West Area Computing section was a bittersweet moment for Dorothy Vaughan. It had taken her eight years to reach the seat at the front of the office. For seven years after that she ruled the most unlikely of realms: a room full of black female mathematicians, doing research at the worlds most prestigious aeronautical laboratory. Her stewardship of the section had supported the careers of women like Katherine Goble, who would ultimately receive her countrys highest recognition for her contributions to the space program. The standards upheld by the women of West Computing set a floor for the possibilities of a new generation of s with a passion for math and hopes for a career beyond teaching. Just as the original NACAites would forever hold on to their identities as members of that venerable organization, the black women would always feel an allegiance to West Area Computing, and to the woman who led it to its final day, Dorothy Vaughan. Dorothy was fortyeight years old in October 1958, with more than a decade of work still stretching out before her. Her older children, so tiny when she had first come to Hampton Roads, were now entering college. The younger s were ts follog fast in the path of their older siblings. Her work at Langley  
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